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THE NORTHERN TRIBUN 


| MOST WID 


OL. vit. Yi $1.50 a Year 


C.C.F. Branch L wutiched At 
Banquet Held In Grande 
Prairie Hotel, Oct. 27th 


A. Elliott Of Hythe Elected 
President — Principles Of C.C. F. 
Explained — Problems’ Confronting 
People Of Canada Discussed— 
Thirty-four Join Up—Organization 
To Be Known As The Grande 
Prairie Branch. 


At a banquet held in the dining- 
room of the Grande Prairie Hotel on 
Thursday evening, October 27, the Discussion of the evening centered 
following were elected as the pro- around what would be a satisfactory 
visional executive of the C.C.F. for |provincial platform, and on the issue 
the constituency of Grande Prairie: |as to whether or not a province could 


J. tion. However, he promised to do 
everything possible for the move- 
ment. 

Membership dues were set at 50 
cents, ten cents of which goes to the 
|federal organization and 40 cents to 
the provincial body, leaving the 
‘funds necessary to the carrying on 
of the local organization to be raised 
by some other means. 


ELY READ HOME PAPER OF THE PEACE RIVER COUNTRY---“LAND OF HOPE AND BEAUTY” | 


GUARDIAN OIL COMPANY'S WELL AT BONANZA, ALTA. 


Casing and machinery to be used to case off the gas and oil sands 
which were penetrated recently arrived at Pouce Coupe a week ago 


last Saturday and drilling to a 
resumed soon. Three shifts will 
Lund, head driller. The drill is n 


greater depth is expected to be 
be operated, according to John 
ow down to 2,500 feet 


} 


President—J. A. Elliott of Hythe. 
Vice-President—J. Callister, Clair- 
mont. | 

Secretary-Treasurer—I. V. Mack- 
lin, Grande Prairie. 

O. V. Gustafson, president of the 
Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way | 
employees, was nominated for secre- 
tary-treasurer, but declined the posi- 


G.P. Board of Trade 
Interests Itself In 
Raising Bear Lake 


J. Jaeger, Chairman Of Membership 
Committee, Reported A Member- 
ship Of 105 And That 200 Was The 
Objective — Question Of Shopping 
Week Favorably Looked Upon. 


At a meeting of the executive of 
the Grande Prairie Board of Trade 
held in the council chamber of the 
Town Hall on Friday night, it was 
decided to circulate-a petition among 
the farmers of the Bear Lake district 
to test the feeling with regard to| 
raising the water level of Bear Lake. 

This action was taken following | 
the reading of a letter from Ducks | 
Unlimited of Winnipeg asking for all | 
possible information with regard to) 
the raising of the lake. | 

President O. B. Harris observed | 
that it was quite possible to get the 
cooperation of the council of the 
Municipal District of Bear Lake and 
W. Sharpe, M.L.A. 

The president further stated that 
the raising of the water level of the 
lake was one of the immediate ob- 
jectives of the board, and he was 
confident that this could be accom- 
plished. 

The minutes of the previous meet- 
ing and the monthly dinner, at which 
much business was transacted, were 
read and adopted. 

J. Jaeger, chairman of the mem- 
bership committee, reported that at 
present there was a membership of 
105, and he saw no reason why this 
number should not be _ increased 
to 200. , 

The question of 


| 


| 


! 


utting on a shop- 
ping week was discussed at some 
length. That it would stimulate 
business was the consensus of the 
meeting. While the board was will- 
ing to give its moral support to the 
idea, it was felt that the Retail 
Merchants Association was the proper 
body to undertake the work. 

The president and L. Kowensky 
were appointed a committee to meet 
the Retail Merchants Association and 
report as soon as possible. 

he secreta was instructed to 
write to Hon. R. J. Manion, federal 
leader of the Conservative party, to 
the effect that when he visits the 
Peace River the Board of Trade will 
be glad to assist in extending to him 
a hearty welcome. 

The next monthly dinner will be 
held on November 15. 


Auction Sale To 
Raise Money For 
B. Lodge Hospital 


BEAVER LODGE, Oct. 31. — To 
raise funds for the Beaver Lodge 
Hospital the directors of the West 
District “osvital Association are 
holding « » ¢ auction sale of con- 
tributed a icles, comprising: Horses, 
cettle, hogs, certified seed wheat, 
certified seed oats, vegetables, pota- 
toes, plow, seed drill and other farm 
implements, radios, gramaphones, 
shotguns, pump, watering trough, 
refrigerators, garden seeder, stoves, 
wood, chickens, geese, magazines, 
carpenter's services, other articles 
too numerous to mention. 


The auctioneer donates his serv- | 


ices—every dollar goes to the fund. 
Hot coffee on the grounds all the 
time. Supply your needs and help 
the hospital. Contributions netting 
five dollars or over will be acknowl- 


edged 
Col. W. Hogg will be the auc- 
tioneer. W. Q. Adams is chairman 


of the building committee. 


HeavyShipmentsOf 
Cattle From North 
Still Continues 


Bacon hogs brought $6.50 on Sat- 
urday, as against $6.35 paid two 
weeks previous. 

Eight carloads of 
shipped from Grande Prairie, one of 
horses, one of hogs, and the balance 
cattle. 

Ninety-three cars of live stock, 
principally cattle, were pulled out 
of Smith. This number was below 
the shipment from the North two 
weeks previous, when 106 cars were 
pulled out of McLennan. 


CEMENT FOR SEPTIC 
TANK POURED TUESDAY 


BEAVER LODGE, Nov. 2.—Cement 
for the septic tank at Beaver Lodge 
Hospital was run Tuesday. John 
Butler, with a gang of 15 men, in- 
cluding J. T. Stewart, plumber of 
Wembley, did the work. r. Stewart 
supervised the laying of 100 feet of 
sewer pipe, etc. All work was done 
by volunteer labor. 


/$100, was sold at $100, and the same 


| sufficient 
|buy 


jor the extra 


livestock were | 


do something along C.C.F. lines until 
a majority is secured in the Dom- 
inion. 

The consensus of opinion was that 
unless the provinces and Dominion 
work together the field of reform 
action is limited. It was pointed out 
that the Dominion government can 
veto provincial acts that are not in 
line with the B.N.A. Act. It was 
further stated that much Dominion 
legislation is a dead letter until as- 
sented to by the provinces. 

Another speaker stated that the 
Old Age Pension Act of the Dom- 
inion, passed some years ago, was ir 
operation in some provinces and not 
in others, because not agreed to by 
them. The recent Unemployment | 
Insurance Act has not been accepted | 
by Quebec or Alberta, and although | 
passed by the Dominion, evidently | 
cannot be enforced without the | 
unanimous consent of the provinces. | 

A lady from the most north- 
westerly community of this area 
wanted to know what the funda- 
mentals of the C.C.F. were. 

A reply was made that the two 
chief principals were cooperative 
action by groups and public control 
or ‘ownership of those industries 
which are now held by monopoly 
control under which the public is 
exploited. The purpose of economic 
activity under the C.C.F. would be 
to satisfy human needs and not the 
accumulation of profits regardless of | 
who suffered. It was stated further | 
that production for use and service | 
at cost would solve the dilemma of 
lack of purchasing power and totally 
obviate the necessity of dividends. 

I. V. Macklin observed that if a} 


binder with every legitimate cost 


tacked on, which cost amounted to 


principal held throughout our econ- 
omic system, there would always be 
money in circulation to 
the total product. When $20 
profit is added, either that per cent 
of the goods is tar up on the shelf 

$20 is loaned by the 
financial system: In either case a 
depression comes along with losses to 
balance profits. The present system 
loans the $20 profit. The Social 
Creditors would have the govern- 


ment issue the extra $20 to make; 


|$120, The C.C.F. says if the article 
} (Continued on Page Five) 


To Develop Claim 
AtHenderson Creek 
Bonanza Oil Field 


F. J. Bachellor Of Edmonton, Heavily 
Interested In The Bonanza Oil 
Field, ts Here, 
Geologist Dr. Irwin Of Calgary— 
Indications Look Very Encouraging 
At Guardian Oil Well. 


F. J. Bachellor, who has an interest 
in considerable acreage in the Bon- 
anza oil field, accompanied by James 
I. Hill of Calgary and E. E. Bishop, 
barrister of Edmonton, was a visitor 
in Grande Prairie on Saturday, hav- 
ing come in from Pouce Coupe. 

Interviewed by The Tribune re- 
porter, Mr. Bachellor said that some 
time ago he had a test hole drilled on 
Henderson Creek, located seven miles 
southeast of the Guardian well. The 
hole was drilled to a depth of 1224 
feet, where the sand encountered had 
a slight odor of oil. 

Mr. Bachellor further stated that 
'Dr. Irwin, geologist, of Calgary, 
jpresident of the Engineers Associa- 
|tion of the province, is at Henderson 
creek checking over the core and 


Accompanied By) 


“Bolivia” Subject Interesting 
Lecture by Mrs. M. MacBeth 
Before G. P. Canadian Club 


There were fifty covers at the 
Canadian Club banquet given in 
honor of Mrs. Madge MacBeth, 
speaking under the auspices of the 


D. W. Patterson occupied the chair. 
With the aid of lantern slides the 
|speaker made her subject, “Bolivia, 
or One Hundred Feet From Heaven,” 


| Association of Canadian Clubs, in |most interesting and informative. 
|the dining room of the Grande Mrs. MacBeth prefaced her lecture 
Prairie Hotel on Wednesday night. (with a brief historical survey of the | 
-_—_eeeoeeee | country. 
| “Bolivia,” observed the speaker, 
Newton &z Smart |is often called the Tibet of South 
America. The major portion of its 


labout half million square miles rises 


To Open New 
Store Saturday 


| level. Eighty per cent of its three 
jand a half million people live about 
|‘one hundred feet from heaven,’ or 
}some 10,000 feet above sea level. La 
|Paz, the capital, is 13,000 feet above 
|sea level. The altitudes are always 
la consideration for strangers, but the 
| sopeney in these altitudes is more 
interesting than that of the lower 
llevels and jungle country.” 

The Indians of the highlands, said 
the speaker, are small-bodied, large- 
lunged people, wiry and tough. The 
last census shows more than 1,000 
centenarians in the country. 


Newton & Smart, owners of the 
Alberta 5c to $1 Store, Grande 
Prairie’s popular “five-and-ten,” are 
busy this Thursday moving their 
stock and fixtures into the Bayhan 
Building, which they purchased last 
month and where a large brilliantly 
painted sign “marks the spot” of the 
new location. 

Removal, it is expected, will be 
completed by Friday and the new 
location will be open for business 
over the week-end. 

A special lighting system has been 
installed, also new fixtures to fit in 
with the business. 


mineral wealth of Bolivia. 
that it claims the largest borax lake 
in the world and the highest navi- 
gable lake in the world—Lake Titi- 
caca, 14,000 feet above sea level. 
Bolivia has produced more silver 
than any other spot in the world. 
The Potosi mine, 17,000 feet above 
sea level, produced more than 15,- 
(Continued on Page Bight) 


THIS PUMPKIN, BROWN IN 
THE SEXSMITH. DISTRICT 


Convention “Chev” 
Oldsmobile Dealers 
Highly Successful 


Says Alex Dalgleish Of Thomson & 
Dalgleish, Dealers in Chevrolet 
And Oldsmobile Products—Dealers | 
Shown 1939 Models — Entertained | 
At Banquet Given By Company. 


There is a pumpkin in 
Pratt’s window which is worth while 
| walking some distance to see. 


| .Alex Dalgleish and J. E. Thomson,; Grown by Alfred Brown of the 
accompanied by Gordon Wilson, ar- |Sexsmith district, the pumpkin tips 
lrived home Friday night from |the scales at 44 pounds. 

Edmonton, where they attended a| The Tribune reporter was _in- 


formed that no artificial means, such 
as milk feeding, 
ducing this fine specimen. 

In the same window 
which weighs an even 28 pounds. 


convention of the northern Alberta 
ldealers of Chevrolet and Oldsmobile 
products. 

Interviewed by The Tribune re- 
|porter, Mr. Dalgleish stated that the 
models for 1939 were on display and 
were explained by experts. 

The dealers, observed Mr. 
gleish, were entertained by 
company at the Macdonald Hotel. 

Mr. Dalgleish said that the conven- 
tion was a success from’every angle. 
|'He stated that they found the high- 
| way good, but they found some diffi- 
culty in driving through the smoke, 
especially at night. 


C.C.F. To Meet At 
Hythe On Tuesday 
November 8th 


| sop of the Wembley district. 
Dal- | 
the | 


|Ripened First Of 


November 


another box of large ripe 
berries grown in the garden of E. S 


Slave Lake. 


In an accompanying letter Mr 


|; were grown 


a | protection. 
A meeting of the C.C.F. supporters! The berries were placed 
will be held at Hythe on Tuesday,|show window of CFGP, to whom| 


|November 8, at 8 p.m. 
J. A. Elliott will occupy the chair. 
There will be a general discussion 

on the various problems confronting | 

the Canadian people, which will be 
followed by a question period. 


Wednesday. 

Mr. Stanley contributes articles tc 
The Tribune each week, under the 
|heading of “Dad’s Notions.” 


completing a further geological sur- | 


vey of the Bonanza field. 


Mr. Bachellor said that he intends | 


| 
| 


jin 


to spend considerable time develop- 
g his holdings in the Bonanza field. 
Speaking of the Guardian Oil well, 
|Mr. Bachellor said that indications 
\looked very encouraging. 


| 


‘Practical Jokers 
‘Put Power Line 
‘Out Of Business 


Practical jokes are sometimes 
overdone, even on Hallowe'en. 


at Sexsmith threw a harrow bar 
chain over the power line at a spot 
just across the railway track on the 
west side of the town. This threw 
the whole system out, but fortunately 
the chain fell off and service was 
resumed. 

Not satisfied with this, the parties 
returned between 11 and 12 the same 
jnight and threw some barbed wire 
over the power line. This put the 
‘entire system out of commission 
until it was sectionalized. Sexsmith 
and Clairmont were without light all 
night. 

W. Whitlock, manager of the 
Canadian Utilities Limited, in dis- 
eens the incident with The 
Tribune, stated that it was a wonder 
someone was not killed, as the per- 
prators of this Hallowe'en prank cer- 
tainly took a desperate chance. The 
act is a criminal one and R.C.M.P., 
are investigating. 

Mr. Whitlock further stated that 
owing to the dense fog and smoke 
which hung over the ages 4 it was 
impossible to locate the trouble until 
Tuesday morning. 


| 


This was the case last Monday) 
night when around 8 o'clock parties | 


ener - 1 


a Ce am 4, 


This layout shows the three mem- 
bers of CFGP’s staff when it first 
went on the air. They are still carry- 
ing on. First, George Sinclair, M.Sc., 
chief engineer; second, Bert Churchill, 
musical director; third, Paul Guy, 
program director. 

The transmitting plant is shown as 
it was at the time of the first broad- 
cast. Since then many  improve- 
ments have been added and it is now 
an attractive spot on the highway. 

CFGP’s vertical antenna is a rad- 
ical departure from the old-fashioned 
two-masted horizontal style. During 
the me ree it has proved very effi- 
cient and the station has covered an 
unusually large territory. 


| 


8 oO eeu aman nabene nated | poem vans senrnsse panne soos anon 


{from one to three miles above sea | 


Mrs. MacBeth then touched on the | 
She said | 


KNEW HOW TO GROW 


D. W. 


were used in pro- 
is a turnip 


It 
|was grown on the farm of S. B. All- 


P. R. Strawberries 


On Tuesday The Tribune received | 
straw- 


Stanley of Aspen Glen, near Faust on 


Stanley stated that the strawberries | 
without any artificial Jack McKenzie. 


they were given as a gift on its first | 
| birthday anniversary, which occurred | Cann. 


GRANDE PRAIRIE, ALBERTA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1938 


CF GP Is Recipient Of 


Five Cents a Copy 


Provinetal Library Dee 41 Ss 


3s 


Many 


Congratulations On Station's 


Canton District Is 
Not Captured 
By Japanese 


Bill Mark of the Donald Cafe re- 
ceived this telegram Thursday mor- 
ning: 

Cable via Imperial, Nov. 3-38 
Hong Kong. 


Donald Cafe, 
Grande Prairie, Alta. 
Hoysun safe. People not leav- 
ing. Inform Wahhinglung. 
MARKTACKWAY. 

The message is from his brother, 
who lives in Hoysun, a rich district 
near Canton. Apparently the Japan- 
ese are only in that city and have 
not captured or occupied the sur- 
rounding territory. 


Anyone Who Can 


To Legion Shoot 


On the afternoon of Friday, 
November 11 (Remembrance Day), 
all those who can click a trigger are 
invited to try their luck at a turkey 
shoot to be held by the Grande 
| Prairie Branch of the Canadian 
|Legion in the Old Capitol Theatre. 
| The big shoot will continue from 


11:30 to 5:30 p.m. and there will be | 


|competitions for ladies as well as 
imen. There will also be competi- 
|tions for individual's teams—in fact 


\in any way desired. 
A snap competition is also on the 
|card, 

The shoot is open to anyone who 
can pull the trigger of a gun. 


A banquet will be held in the 


men only. 
This will be followed by a smoker 
and dance. 


‘Cenotaph To Be 
‘Unveiled Sexsmith 
‘On Nov. 11th 


1. 


SEXSMITH, Nov. 
November 11, the 20th 
of Armistice Day,’ will 
celebrated in Sexsmith. 
One outstanding feature will be 
the unveiling of the Cenotaph, 


—- Friday, 


be 


erected by Canadian Legion Post 60) 


of Sexsmith. 

This is the first monument ever 
erected in the Peace River country to 
the memory of the boys who paid 
the extreme 
War and all posts in the country have 
been invited to be represented, and 
if the weather man is on his good 
behavior there should be a _ large 
crowd present. Grande Prairie Town 
Band will be in attendance. 

At 6:30 a banquet will be held in 
Kirstein’s Hall, and dance in the eve- 


lning will be held in the Sexsmith 
|Hall, with Kirstein’s Orchestra in 
attendance. War-time music will be | 


|the order of the dance. 

The Unveiling Ceremony 
Fall in, 2:30. 
Flag Standard Bearer, 
Band, Parade. 
| “© Canada!” 
Prayer, Rev. H. E. Webb. 
Unveiling, Zone Representative, 


Jim Walker. 


| Placing Wreath, Miss Lila Mac- 


in the | Diarmid. 


Two-Minute Silence. 


Hymn, “Abide With Me.” 
Prayer; Rev. E. Rands. 
Reveille, Mr. Tom Wilson. 
“God Save the King,” Band. 


) 


Transmitting Plant and Original Staff of CFGP 


Pull Trigger Invited 


Grande Prairie Hotel at 7 p.m., for) 


anniversary 
fittingly | 


sacrifice in the Great | 


Dedication Address, Rev. A. Willis |"48 


First Birthday On W ednesday 


Wires and Ph 


one 


Legion Had Large 


Ard Thanks Everyone. 
All telegrapk and telephone lines 


led to Broadcasting Station CFGP on 
Wednesday, carrying best wishes and 


congratulations to this station on its 
first birthday anniversary. The 
messages came from far and _ near, 
Among them were telegrams from 
|\CJCA and CFAC. 

At 9 p.m. a special program was 
broadeast. Short speeches were the 


order of the evening, interspersed by 
musical numbers. 

Mayor P. J. Tooley extended con- 
gratulations to CFGP on behalf of 
the town of Grande Prairie. 

Rene Pelletier, M.P. for Peace 
|River, who was to speak, wired that 
it was impossible for him to be 
present because of road conditions. 
He sent his best wishes and a mess- 


age which was broadcast in both 
|French tnd English. 
Mr. Berry's Message 
Cecil Berry, manager of CFGP 
spoke as follows: 
“One year old today!—Has ever a 


jyear gone so quickly? 

“It is said that it does one good to 
j}look back over the days that are gone 
and spend a short while in retrospect 
with the object of eliminating in the 
future the mistakes of the past. And 
well may we at CFGP look back. We 
have made many mistakes—uninten- 
tionally, of course; but mistakes, 
nevertheless—and it must be our en- 
deavor in the years that lie ahead of 
us to profit by the mistakes of the 
past, or otherwise the looking back 
will avail us nothing. 

| “Do you know, it is difficult at 
times to find time to look back. The 


Boys “Set ’em Up’ 
Day Following 
| Halloween Night 


In Germany they “heil" Hitler, and 
jin Italy they “heil” Mussolini. 
Tuesday a group of Grande Prairie 
| boys were “heiling’’ Constable Harper 
as he watched them set up in place 
certain outhouses which they toppled 
over the night before, it being Hal- 
lowe’en. It was a case of “set 
for the boys. 

| In many places in Alberta and the 
jrest of Canada the old method of 
celebrating Hallowe’en has been dis- 
carded and a milder form adopted 
and enjoyed. 

However, at Grande Prairie boys 
seem inclined to traditional observ- 
ance and therefore celebrated Holy 
Eve in the manner their forebears 
did. 

The boys took their task of repara- 
tion philosophically. One of them 
l'was heard to say to a_ fellow-lad: 
“This is love’s labor lost.” Another 
jremarked, ‘Next year we will have 
ito organize differently, so as not to 
|get caught.” 
| Another Hallowe’en prank was let- 
ting the air out of tires. Even the 
{Mayor found his four tires flat in the 
;morning. 

One of the groups of boys under 
direction of Constable Harper was 
forced to go round and pump air into 
the tires of all the cars “tapped,” 
which sort of took the fun out of the 
ht before. 
| There was no goose-stepping, 
|boys using the ordinary Canadian 
stride as they went about undoing 
what they had done the night before 


the 


Of course Hallowe’en there were 
groups of younger boys and _ girls, 
|dressed as hobgoblins, witches, and 
all the rest of it, going about ring- 
ing door bells and asking for gifts, 


which as a rule were gladly given. 

On the whole Hallowe'en at Grande 
Prairie passed rather quietly, thoungh 
{the boys and girls had a whale of a 
time nevertheless. 


| Opportunity To Aid 
Women’s Institute 
Cancer Fund 


Have 
Women’s 


you contributed to the 
Institute Cancer Fund 
yet” Here is your opportunity 
to do your bit and add to the 
fund which will be used to buy 


' radium for free government 
treatment of cancer in the Uni- 
versity Hospital, Edmonton. 


Skilled radiologists will do their 
best there, but they need your 
help to buy a sufficient supply of 
radium, 


Dr, A. T. Bazin of Montreal, 
| past president of the Canadian 
| Medical Association, said re- 


cently while on a tour of the 
Dominion on a campaign for the 
Canadian Society for the Control 
of Cancer: “Half the deaths re- 
sulting trom cancer in past years 
could have been prevented if 
detected in their early — state. 
| The important thing is to con- 
sult your doctor at the first, 
suspicion of the disease. ... It 
is your duty to yourself and 
your dependents to find out if 
you have cancer.” 

Donations for Grande Prairie 
may be sent to Mrs. C. Stredu- 
linsky or Mrs. L. Kowensky. 
Other districts may send dona- 
tions to their local Women’s 
Institute. List of donors will be 
published next week, 


‘em” | 


Messages Flood 


Station From Morning Till Night 
Many Assemble at The Studio 


Well Balanced Special Program Broadcast After 9 P.M. On Which Canadian 
Spot—Musical 
Speeches—Manager Berry In Brief Message Pays Tribute To His Staff 


Numbers’ Interspersed Among 


broadcasting business is in its in- 
fancy, and like our prototype, the 
‘one-year-old,’ we must learn as we 
zo along. And you-—our listeners— 


can help us so much from day to day 
and month to month. Send in your 
suggestions and criticisms—we like 
to have them and we hope to profit 
by them. 

“Just how much CFGP has grown 
in one year will be brought home to 
you when | tell you that one year 
ago we had a staff of only three and 
that we now have a staff of nine. 
And may I remind you of this: that 
even with the best equipment in the 
world, a broadcasting station would 
be nothing without a loyal staff. 

“T know that I have here at CFGP 
the most loyal staff in the world. I 
am proud of everyone of them-—they 
all work like Trojans, for’ the 
sponsors, the listeners and the sta- 
tion. 

“True they sometimes mis- 
pronounce words—-who doesn’t? I 
would not want them if they didn’t. 
Would you? 

“IT salute my staff 
they're great—evecryone of them. 
And all listeners in the Peace River 

(Continued on Page Bight) 


at CFGP— 


G.P. Canadian Club 
Reorganizes And 


Elects Officers 


Norman Swallow Is New President; 
Live Committee To Make Drive 
For Membership 


Following the lantern-slide lecture 


| by Mrs. Madge MacBeth before the 
Grande Prairie Canadian Club the 
meeting was turned into a_ business 
one and the following officers were 


elected: 

President—Norman Swallow. 

Vice-president—T. W. Lawlor. 

Executive Mrs. W. J. Thomson, 
Mrs. P. U. Clubine, Mrs. D. W. Pat- 
terson, W. C, Pratt, R. H. Watcher, 
and Dr. D. O. Carroll. 

Historian—Dr. L. J. O’Brien. 

Membership committee 
Patterson, J. H. Sissons, 
Porteous, 

Selection a secretary-treasurer 
was left to the executive. 

is the opinion of the club that 

there is a place in the community for 
a Canadian Club and a_ strenuous 
drive will soon be launched for 
members. 


D. W. 
and L. C. 


f 
oft 


Remembrance Day 
To Be Observed By 
B’ Lodge Legion 


BEAVER LODGE, Oct. 31, - On 
Remembrance Day, November 11, the 
Reaver Lodge Branch of the Cana- 
dian Legion will hold their usual 
service in Victory Hall here. All re- 
turned soldiers are asked to attend. 


The comrades will meet at the Legion 


Hall at 10:30; service to commence 
at 10:45 a.m. 

At 2:30 p.m.,, through the kindness 
of Mr. Frank Donald, a free picture 
show will be held for all children. 
Adults wishing to accompany the 


children will pay the usual price 

\t 7:30 p.m. a double feature show 
vill be held, usual prices. 

At 9:30, in Victory Hall, the Vaga- 
bonds Orchestra will play for danc- 
ng Gents 50 cents, ladies 25 cents. 
Everybody welcome, 


Rev. F. D. Jones To 


Deliver Address At 
Memorial Service 


Re T. D. Jones of Christ Church 
(Anglican) will deliver the address 
it the Legion memorial services to be 
held in the Capitol Theatre on Re- 
membrance Day, November 11, com- 
‘neing ot 10:45 sharp. 


y) 


J. W. Piekard will sing “Flanders 
Fields.” 

T. Wilson will sound the Last Post 
and Reveille, 

Others assisting are Rev. C. E, 
Fisher I Forbes Presbyterian 
Chureh; Rev. J. M. Baxter of Me- 
Laurin Baptist; Rev. A. Willis Cann 


of St. Paul’s United; Captain Eby of 
the Salvation Army. 

The town band will play a selee- 
tion, 


G.P. Badminton To 
Start Wednesday 
November 16th 


The Grande Prairie Badminton 
Club will commence the season on 
Wednesday, November 16, 

Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and 
Thursday have been chosen as play- 
ling days. 

Last year the club had 50 members 
jand it is expected that this number 
|will be equalled, if not surpassed 
{this season, 


PAGE TWO 


THE NORTHERN TRIBUNE) 


AN INDEPENDENT WEEKLY 
NEWSPAPER 


Published e 


Holder of Alberta “Better New 
Shield for Year of 1987 


“cover” the local news field with 
mess to all sections and parties; 


to aid in the development of the Peace 


make a hole-in-one. While I do not jlies right to the hand of each of us: |tions, any more than it can eliminate 


\feel chesty, I of course feel some- 
‘what jubilant. I am sorry, however, 
that I cannot give expression to my 


deed—that at present, so far as I am 
,concerned, there is a 
drought.” 

The writer of this column joins 
others in offering to “Sandy” con- 
gratulations on attaining his ambition 


complete 


River Country and help make known to make a hole in one. 


this northern inland empire's many | 
advantages as a home-land. All news 


is printed without intentional distor- 

tion. The paper's opinions are ex- 

pressed only in its editorial columns. 
detters for publication are 


proper not necessaril for 
publication, but as evidence of good 
faith. In publishing a communication | 
The Tribune does not imply agree- 
ment. 
Subscription Rates: 

One Year, in British Empire.... $1.50 
One Year, in United States..... 2.00 


Legal and other advertising rates 
furnished on application. 


J. B. YULE. Editor. 
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1938 


| Along “ Trail 


By J. B. YULE 


NOMINATING CONVENTIONS 

During my lifetime I have attended 
many political nominating conven- 
tions. 

At such conventions, speaking gen- 


wel- | 
comed. A pen name may be used, but | 
correspondents must also sign their 


Dad's Notions 


By E. S. Stanley 


| 


| 

j 

| For long periods we view death 
with more or less detachment. Now 
‘and again we are stirred by a feeling 
jof pity for the victim and_ sadness 
'for the bereaved, but we still remain 
| detached. 

| It is far from our thoughts that 
|the next one might be one of our own 
home. But the time DOES come 
|}when with a fell swoop a loved one 
is snatched from us, tearing our 
jhearts pitilessly by the parting. 

| There is no distress comparable to 
;}the wounds of the heart. And for 
'those wounds to be within and out of 
isight does not make them any easier 
to bear—they are harder. 

| Flesh wounds may be stitched up 
‘and disinfected, healing lotions and 
j}bandages applied, and the patient 
|relieved to some extent. But not so 
|with torn hearts. Words have little 


erally, one sees human nature at its effect; kindnesses and tokens of re- 
best. People are there to make ‘spect do but little more. Friends are 
friends not enemies, and do their /at a loss to know what to do, and the 
best for their particular candidate. lafflicted heart bleeds still. 

Of course there is the odd stormy; The loved-one WAS, and now he 
convention. I understand there was|IS NOT. It is mystifying. We are 
one such convention held not far left dazed. Even the devout who re- 
from here several years ago. treats to the promises of the Scrip- 

As a rule, a newspaper observer tures has a cry within:—‘Why must 
can pretty well gauge the feeling cf it be?” 
the convention after each carfdidate A lady brought with her a doll and 


has spoken. 

One who is sensitive to atmosphere 
can, as a rule, gauge very closely the 
result of a political convention. 

The good fellowship at such con- 
ventions is evidenced by 
shaking, which is general. One is 
not supposed to stand on ceremony 
and an introduction is not necessary 
in striking up a conversation, during 
which one of course tries to feel out 
the other fellow as to his choice of 
candidates. 

I have often said to myself during 
a convention that it was too bad that 
such good fellowship could not be 
translated into the ordinary affairs 
of life. 

Then there is the explosion period 
when the candidate is chosen, the 
time when the supporters of the 
winning candidate let loose their 
pent-up feelings. It is a_ great 
moment. . 

After all, under certain circum- 
stances men and women are simply 


grown-up boys and girls. At nom- 
inating conventions they of course 
carry themselves with a_ certain 


dignity, not common among boys and 
girls. This dignity is a veneer which 
is spread high, wide and handsome 
when the psychological moment ar- 
rives. 

It is all to the good that after all 
we are but grown-up boys and girls. 
It is that which softens character and 
makes life worth while. 

= e a 


WHEN HE WAS RIGHT HE WAS 
WRONG 


The other night I joined a group 
of men friends. They were discuss- 
ing the subject, ‘“‘What should a man 
do to be an ideal husband?” Al 
were married, so they were anxious 
to arrive at a base of conduct from 
which they could operate to meet all 


occasions which might arise within | 


the matrimonial circle. 

Seriousness- and humor were de- 
lightfully mixed in the discussion. 

One of the party told the following 
story: 

“T have a friend who would like to 


be the best husband in the world but | 


who has a faculty of always doing 
the wrong thing in the opinion of his 
wife. 

“One day after this husband had 
done everything wrong, even to 
walking across the room, the wife 
exclaimed: ‘You are getting on my 
nerves to such an extent that you are 
driving me crazy!’ 

“On the following morning when 
the husband arose to engage in the 
catch-as-catch-can for a_ livelihood, 
he resolved to watch his every step 
during the day and do everything 
according to the household manual, 
and in his opinion he was successful. 

“During each meal he was _ al) 
attention, passing around the various 
dishes at the right time. He even 
helped to wash the dishes. The wood 
and water in for the night, he sat 
down to read a daily paper. Then 
something went wrong and his wife 
‘blew up.’ 

“‘*Now what's wrong? 
to do everything right 
marked hubby. 

“*The wife replied: ‘I admit I have 
no fault to find with your conduct. 
But your actions have been in such 
contrast with your general behavior 
that they have gotten on my nerves. 
In fact your conduct today actually 
upsets me and I feel as though I 
would go insane.’” 

“Now, what would you do in that 
case*” asked the narrator. 

One of the party suggested that a 


I have tried 
today,’ re- 


committee be appointed to go further | 


into the question and report at the 
next meeting. 
The suggestion was accepted and 
the committee named. 
ie oe - 


GOLF HAS ITS CURIOUS ANGLES 
“Sandy” Stevenson, pro. at 
Richmond Hill Golf and Country 
lub, who recently made a hole in 
one which caused considerable stir 
in local golf circles, tells the follow- 
ing story on himself: 

It happened in Scotland, observed 
“Sandy.” who went on to say he had 
just made a long drive when a fore- 
some playing at the next hole all put 
up their hands, which was the signal 
that “Sandy” had “holed out’—IT be- 
lieve that is the term. 

It is the custom in Scotland that 
when a, player makes a hole in one, 
whether he is wearing plus fours or 
not, to fill ali the vessels round about 
with the “cream of the heather.” 

Now “Sandy” is no piker, so he 
filled them up with a nonchalance as 
though he owned the largest estate 
in Scotland. , 

Now here is the sore touch. After 
the “cream of the heather” had gone 
down the various channels “Sandy” 
was informed that he did not make 
the hole in one—but the shot was so 
close the! one of the men tipped it 


into the hole. 

“Naturally,” observed “Sandy” to 
the writer, “Il was sadly disappointed. 
That was some forty years ago, and 
I had to wait till now to actually 


hand- | 


the | 


floaned it to the child while she and 
;the child’s mother were visiting. On 
| parting with the doll the child cried 
and became hysterical. How like a 
| child we, too, fail to see how much 
richer our lives have been made by 
; the loan of a loved-one for a season. 
' Between our outbursts of grief we 
|ponder. Just what was this per- 
‘sonality we knew and loved? Where 
!did he come from, and whither has 
{his spirit flown? We are told the 
,\Scriptures have the answer. It is 
well to read them. 

Suffering poignant grief to the 
point of threatening the mind, a lady 
‘at last bestirred herself. With re- 
flection, she discerned the cause of 
‘the untimely death. An awakened 
|desire to ajd others led her to take 
jtraining for nursing, and her services 
jeased the suffering and prolonged 
the lives of hundreds. And this 
activity was her own “retreat” and 
| healing. 
| The sure relief to heart-anguish is 


‘ACTION. Not long will one read 
the Scriptures before he finds 
‘ACTION to be his remedy. The 


Seeeer. ot Grande feelings in a way appropriate to the Love and Understanding. 
pers” 

y hi 
The Tribune's aim is to Carouge | 
also 


| tendency 


‘doctor wisely advises diversion. The. 


|psychologist is correct in command- 
ing the substituting of a different 
line of thought, get to work or at 
play. Faith and consolation stand- 
ing alone are weak,—they need to be 
accompanied by ACTION. 

And may we let these occasions 
make our erstwhile dormant resolu- 
|tions, or good intentions, articulate. 
Let us scatter flowers of kindness 
here while we may,—let us make our 
lives rich with good deeds,—and let 
them be fragrant with wholesome 
| living. 


Geeeene ada s 
IN THE TRIBUNE'S |! 
MAIL BOX 


~-@ 


TRIBUTE TO THE MONKMAN 
PASS HIGHWAY 


One has been reading and hearing 
so much about the new highway 
these last two years. A large demand 
for money and provisions has been 
made upon us all to help these boys 
|blaze the trail. But to my mind the 
jhighest tribute should be given to 
the girl who went along both years 
|to feed these boys, not only their 
{bodies but also their souls, giving 
them the best of herself. It seems 
quite fitting to me that this girl 
should bear the name of the man 
who blazed the trail and that this 
highway should keep this name. 

ONE WHO APPRECIATES 
GOOD WORK. 


H 
H 
4 
A 


| TO THE BUILDERS OF THE 
| PEACE RIVER COUNTRY 


| What a marvellous revelation these 
jlast few weeks have been to many 
;of us! 

Which of us who listened to Hitler’s 
speech to the world could fail to 
junderstand its meaning? We did 
|not need an interpreter for that. The 
jintonations of his voice, the cries of 
|his people behind him, was a cry of 
|destruction—a cry of a nation voicing 
}its wrongs in the only way it knew. 
Throwing away all pretenses of 
|Christianity and civilization. Tearing 
}down that Ideal of True Manhood 
jand Power, and turning it into a 
jbeastly thing. Taking the sign of 
lthe Cross and twisting it into the 
Nazi sign. That cry of “Heil Hitler!” 
tbrought so vividly to my mind that 
cry on the field of Calvary, “Hail 
Thou King of the Jews!” 

Thank God that that Ideal of True 
Manhood still lives in the hearts of 
men and women of all nations, and 
that Wonderful Power is still alive, 
and was so plainly shown in all those 
'who helped to avert a_ terrible 
tragedy. We know, too, that the 
power of prayer was behind it. That 
most human of all loves: the women 
praying for their husbands and sons, 
|the daughters for their fathers, 
| brothers and lovers. Let us keep up 
that prayer. Let us not stop until we 
jhave made this country a sane and 
safe place to live in. 

What was the secret of Christ’s 
|power? A wonderful understanding 
|of the needs of both body and mind 
; (or soul), 

I have looked at my own family 
and my neighbors and have visited 
many places, but in every home and 
community and town and city I see 
that spirit of unhappiness and unrest. 
The young people putting up a brave 
show of pretense only to cover a 
feeling of helplessness. Many of us 
older ones not even making a pre- 


Our churches, our politics, lawyers, 
doctors, bankers, merchants, and our 
very home come under this destruc- 
tive torce. 
lies and false doctrines and hypoc- 
risies which are plainly shown in all 
these professions should be criticized. 
Our very homes must come under 
these criticisms after this work of 
destruction has been thoroughly done. 
We MUST have something to build 
them up again, and that something 


| 
| 


| 


|study the life of Christ. He showed 
jus so plainly what the world needed. 
\Just two tools—one for each hand— 
Let each 
fone of us grasp these two tools and 
istart to build up a safe and sane 
| civilization. 

I for one am going to give it a 
}trial and start on my own home, and 
then when I see that it works (as I 
|know it will), I trust I may be able 
ito give my neighbor a hand in re- 
| building his home on the same lines. 
| CHRISTIAN CITIZEN. 


| 
|HAVE CAUSE TO THANK THOSE 
WHO PUT IN CFGP 


| Thanksgiving may be past, but for/eat them, 


the enterprise of those who put radio 
station CFGP into this country many 
of us have reason to be thankful. 
Most of our radio tubes are a few 
years old and the batteries very low, 
so that outside stations are practically 
no more, but CFGP still comes in 
strong and clear. 

The class of program may be called 
high or low by experts, but it suits 
us pretty well. Many years ago, 
before the days of radio, in a remote 
country area of Ontario about the 
only music we heard was at Sunday 
school or church. By means of radio 


we have learned to appreciate opera, | 


grand or light, the songs of the shows, 
etc.; but when an old familiar hymn 
comes over, sung by one of the great 
choirs of the world, it simply has 
everything else beat. 
boys, and probably must have from 
8 to 10 p.m. for the bang and rattle 
of jazz; but the evening is often the 
only spare time for the workingman, 


Boys will be 


THE NORTHERN TRIBUNE 


unemployment? q 

Is it not clear that the United 
States of America are in bad need, 
just now, of another Abraham Lin- 
jcoln to guide their destiny towards | 
a truer democracy? 

“The od a of ea a 
magnifi y dictators to make r ‘ 
| feigned excuses look more plausible.” | same Fae py Day is here again. 
(E. S. Stanley, in The Northern 
Tribune.) This is a great truth. 

“At a recent teachers’ conference 
(conference of The National Federa- 
tion ef Class Teachers, Sept., 1937) 
a little incident from the county of 
Cumberland was described. A group 
of children were given some eggs to 
eat, but they did not know how to 
never having had them 
| before. Similarly, some _ children | 
|from the town of Barnsley, in York- | 
ishire, on being offered custard, but- 
iter and bananas refused them all, | 
inever having tasted them and not) 
knowing if they would be able to eat | 
them. This was in England in 1937.) 
|It is worth remembering that we live | 


of the blood they shed. 


What more is there to do? 


things were kept safe? 
these things they died. 


it hard to help themselves. 
of our country and her people. 


in a very rich country which allows | 
half of its children to be brought up| 
in these conditions.” Can we well! 
criticize such conditions, when in 
Canada we have over one-tenth of 
‘the population on relief, and a sur- 


plus of food? 

| In the meantime explain this 
‘conundrum to yourself: The Ameri- 
can dollar is protected, covered, by 
$1.42 of gold, and the Canadian) 
dollar by $0.26 of gold. But the two 
have the same purchasing value! 


crippled soldiers. 


November 11 is a day 
r the soldiers who fought in the Great War, 1914-18. 

The Poppy, which is used at this time, makes us remember those 
who died for Right, for King and Country. 
Its beauty tells us how line they were. 
just to remember and honor them is not enough. 


Canadian Legion’s Poppy Day 
Address To School Children 


when we 


Its red color reminds us 
But 


By dying they kept us safe and 


everyone should do his or her part to help to keep o 
Freedom, Justice, Right over Might. 


What 
For 


ers safe. 


How may we today show our appreciation for what they did? 
Remember the dead by helping the living. Some who did not die, 
but were more or less hurt need your heip now. Let every boy and 
| girl wear a Poppy for REMEMBRANCE and put something in the 
| collection boxes to go towards helping those of our soldiers who find 
Those soldiers bravely upheld the honor 
We today must uphold our honor 
by seeing that what was promised to them is done. 
| served their Country well should be in need. 

The Poppy emblem which you will wear represents the Flanders 
Poppy. Over there on the battlefields it grows in great numbers. 
It is planted in the cemeteries on the graves of our dead heroes. 
The Poppy used on Poppy Day is made by disabled soldiers. This 
gives them work that they can do. 
Flanders Poppy, the more they are used, the more work there is for 


No one who 


So the more people who wear a 


ALWAYS BE PROUD TO WEAR A POPPY FOR REMEMBRANCE 


least some of that time is given over 
to something that is restful and full | 
of harmony and beauty. i“A NATION WHICH KNOWS 
If it were not for lack of capital I | HERSELF” 

would sure tell the CFGP world | 

about the many perils incident to a | During the pas* few weeks the 
decaying capitalism and the many!world has gone through a_ very 
improvements possible through a /serious crisis, one which might have 
C.C.F. economy, but capitalists were |set the whole world into a cauldron, 
necessary to put in this station, and |the extent of which no man could 
it is a bright spot on a dark picture. |foresee. True, war has been averted, 


A. C. LA RIVIERE. 


NOT 


| Fascism is capitalism under mar- | 
;tial law, and Social Credit a la | 
Douglas leads to this. So does bw 
Toryism of the Conservative and 
so some of us are very glad when at |Liberal parties. . 


NSARD 


THE INEXORABLE PRINTED RECORD OF THE VOICES OF 
PARLIAMENT 


Manion to Parliament, the reporters 
must speed up to, and pass, 200. 
Hansard is the printed record «f 
Parliamentary debates which may not 
be changed. A man speaks and Han- 
sard records him. The Hansard re- 


By THOMAS WAYLING 


Words—words—words. Thousands of 
them, millions of them, pouring in 
spate on Parliament Hill. Cabinet 
ministers, senators, back  benchers, 
talking, discussing, questioning, argu- 


It brings the world’s best music to 
the remotest shack of the northland, 
if they have a radio. 
economy it is 

expenditure on radios 


music and 


would be more economical than the) 


increases in mental 
I. V. MACKLIN. 


continual vast 
hospitals. 


PERTINENT OR IMPERTINENT 
REFLECTIONS 


All countries of this planet have 
governments which, to a different 
extent, are infested by a money com- 
plex. Even the Soviets and little 
New Zealand are not excluded. The 
degree of infection confirms that a 
country is capitalistic or has a serious 
towards true socialism. 
Amongst capitalistic countries can be 
listed Italy, Germany, the United 
States of America, England, France, 
Canada and several others. In the 
socialist class can be included the 
Soviets and New Zealand. Some of 
the Scandinavian countries are mak- 
ing a strong approach to socialism. 

A government, for its internal 
affairs, should have no recourse to 
borrowing or saving of any money. 
Any transgression of this truth can 
be considered as derogatory to 
normal economics. 

In New Zealand to borrow from 
citizens, corporations or elsewhere, 
for internal affairs is an unwarrant- 
able concession to capitalism: and in 
the Soviets to borrow from the citi- 
zens, as is done, is a social and an 
economic error, which cannot be 
absolved, no matter the excuses 
placed forward to explain such use- 
less borrowings. 

Where is the country, these days, 
that cannot comfortably support its 
population, without unduly borrow- 
ing any money for its internal af- 
fairs? Im no country, life should de- 
pend principally on money for its 
subsistence. There is no excuse 
whatever for Canada not to pay a 
pension at the age of 60, not to have 
free hospitalization and free care for 
sickness, when a little country as 
New Zealand, with far less produc- 
tion and natural resources can do it 
or intends to do so in a short time 
from now. 

To wish to base the issue of money 
on the natural resources of a coun- 
try is silly, and a useless perform- 
ance. France and England, appar- 
ently, owe to the United States sev- 
eral billions of dollars since the last 
world war . Not an inch of their 
respective territory, not a particle of 
their natural resources are and were 
affected or involved. 

Owing to circumstances, England 
and France lost several million men 
at the war, and the United States 
only lost a few thousands. They 
were ready to lose far more, but the 
war ended! 

Since the war is over, France and 
England have not suffered any, 
owing to these debts; and as far as 
this is concerned, the United States 
neither! 

The war that was to end all wars, 
and save democracy, in that sense, 
has been a failure! 

The other day we nearly had an- 
other war. How and why was it 
averted? Some folks say or pretend 
that 
prepared. Colonel Lindbergh is ac- 
cused of saying that the Nazis had 
a great superiority in aviation. Other 
folks say or pretend that France and 


Under a C.C.F. | 
probable that public | 


but for how long? To go into details 
as to the merits and demerits of the 
“Munich Peace Pact,” I am not in a 
position to criticize, nor would I if [ 
could, because I am fully confident 
the men to whom we have entrusted 
the power to rule our destinies do so 
after careful consideration of all that 
jis involved. Mere man makes mis- 
takes and it is always easy to criticize 
after the everit, rather than praise. 
This, 
javerage citizen thinks of today’s pre- 
dicament. 


fhe realizes the future is none too 
secure. 

Some time ago I referred to the 
map of Europe as a chess board, with 
moves and counter-moves to be 
made before any great war would be 
thrust upon us. This is still the 
dominant factor in the European 
situation, and will be for some years 
to come. Each manoeuvre will be 
more intensified than the last, until 
the nations responsible for worid 
turmoil clash over a bone neither can 
secure. 
utter destruction of these nations. 
Can we find proof of these facts? 
Yes, if we will only take the time 
and patience to search the Scriptures. 
God has given His word for every 
movement to him who has eyes to 
see and ears to h with. We are 
the blind leaders the blind—a 
nation and company of nations that 
know not their own identity, an 
identity which has been thrust upon 
us daily for the past twenty-one 
years: Israel the nation, not the 
‘church, had to overthrow the yoke 
jof the Gentiles in the latter days. 
|Was it just an accident that British 
troops accomplished this in 1917, dis- 
|closing herself as Israel and not a 
Gentile nation, after 1335 years of 
{Gentile rule? Was it just an acci- 
‘dent that the Turkish proverb, 
\“When the waters of the Nile flow 
to Jerusalem, then is our doom 
sealed,” should come true when 
General Allenby piped the Nile 


| waters to the gates of Jerusalem? ls/| 


jit an accident that Britain holds 
|Egypt and the Soudan today, to be 
jlost for a little while by Israel in the 
jlater days? Is it an accident that 
|Lybia and Ethiopia came back 
|their old Bible names these later 
'days, as prophesied? Is it an acci- 
dent that Britain holds the key posi- 
tions of the world today, as promised 
to Israel? Is it not true that Britain 
is a servant nation as was Israel? 
Is it not true that Britain has pro- 
claimed the Gospel throughout the 
whole world as proclaimed Israel 
would do? Is it not true that Britain 
has been a lending nation and not a 
borrowing nation, as Israel had to be 
and was? Is it an acicdent that our 
Royal House is descended from the 
|House of David, as promised to 
\Israel? Surely these are questions 


1914-1938 


'Come with me back across the years, 

Do you hear the steady tramp of feet? 

The War Lords decreed to break the 
Peace, 

|Men as enemies would meet. 


|The call to arms went out, 

|Peaceful villages turned to armed 
camps— 

; What was it all about? 


|England, being capitalistic countries, | . ; : 
‘preferred to phan mo with Nazis or |P° you remember the din of battle? of its pulpits are occupied with men 


| 


It is only right that the | 


Fascists rather than with Sovietism 
or socialism. And the alliance with 
little Techeco-Slovakia became an- 
other bit of paper, just like the one 
written for the Treaty of Versailles. 

Little Tcheco-Slovakia is a capi- 
talist country! Is it not? What 
about Spain? What about the non- 
intervention plans or pseudo plans? 
Would a victory by Franco be less 
embarrassing to France, or especially 
England, than his defeat? 

What about China? Is imperial- 
istic Japan partitioning that country 
for the sake of Japanese and Chinese 
capitalists, or is it in a sanctimonious 
attitude against Comm ? 

Is it so that during the first two 
centuries of the Christian era the 
Christians lived as communists? 

Is it so that reecntly, with unani- 
mity the cardinals and bishops of 
Germany ordered all church bells to 
ring, in all parishes of that country, 
in order to thank God, because He 
had permitted Hitler to save peace, 
and had saved the world against 
Communism? 

What would be the object of Great 
Britain in abandoning its protec- 
torate over Palestine? Are these 
only vague news? 

Is Mussolini a real protector of 
Islam? 

Are the Mohammedans inclined to 
become Fascists? 

Next on the program of events 
may be India, Indo-China, and pos- 
sibly Algeria. 

Is it not evident that capitalism 
cannot stop wars and war prepara- 


Have you forgotten that agonized cry? 
The youth, shell-torn and shattered— 
,O God, why must they die! 


| 

'They died because of a promise we 

| gave 

'That all future wars would cease; 
That man to man, the world o’er, 
Would live in a realm of Peace. 

| 


How have we kept that promise? 
Was their sacrifice all in vain? 
|Have we tried to bring Peace and 
| Goodwill to men, 

|Or succumbed to the lust for gain? 


'Again the ffamp of marc t; 
O God is humanity all in v 
|Must men as enemies meet? 


|Must the youth of this world be 
| sacrificed 

[To satisfy man’s greed? 

‘Just dividends on armaments 

|Is this man’s hellish creed! 


'Again the dogs of Hell are yapping, 
se 


Is there no place in this world for 
Peace? 

|Must the powers of darkness win? 
Human life so cheap, bread so dear! 
|Surely this is man’s major sin. 

| 


jit us live and work for the Brother- 
h 
| 


As we promised those who sleep 
‘neath the sod; 
Let us find the real value of human 


ife 
That Thy will may be done, O God! 
Jimniie Thomson, 


I think, summarizes what the, 


He feels that, while peace | 
has been snatched at the last minute, | 


The same bone will be the! 


to/miah the prophet gives us a 


ing. 

Down in the centre aisle a shorthand 
reporter’s pen races across the ruled 
pages; a flip and another page, line 
after line, page after page. There’s an 
international crisis to be recorded: 
there’s a debate about unemployment; 
there's a spot of oratory aroused by 
the firing of the postmaster at Tickle- 
penny Creek. Freat words, little 
words, sentence, paragraph and page, 
they go down in shorthand, for this is 
the permanent reeord of the doings of 
the Canadian House of Commons. Over 
| in the Senate other reporters are tak- 
ing down the measured tons and the 
rounded periods of the elder statesmen. 
| Lucky the reporter who records the 
| clear, resonant voice of a thoughtful 

erator: unlucky the man who has ti 
| follow the rambling, ill-enunciated re- 
| marks of a careless talker. The aver- 
| age speed is about 150 words a minute, 
but with the return of the Hon. R. J. 


ee aeenat 


we ought to satisfy ourselves with, 
questions which will o; our eyes 
to the reading of our Bible, questions 
which the Church cannot fulfil but 
only the nation Israel can . All these 
questions are vital to our existence 
as a nation and company of nations, 
;Questions which if we answer them 
as we ought to will bring us as a 
whole to the feet of Him who taught 
us to pray, “Thy Kingdom come; 
Thy Will be done in earth, as it is in 
Heaven.” The individual can attain 
personal salvatioh, but it is only the 
nation as a whole can obtain the 
salvation from war, pestilence, 
hunger and want by coming before 
, their God with a repentant heart. A 
|study of Israel’s history will reveal 
all this too plainly: When they heid 
God to their hearts, all was happi- 
ness, freedom from war and all that 
goes with it, but when tied up to 
the ways of false gods, what a pitiful 
sight . Is this not our fate today? 
We are too much tied to false gods to 
realize that the true God is our only 
salvation from the miseries which 
we, as a nation, are suffering from. 


What is wrong with our ministers 
jtoday? Are they afraid of their 
|Bible to teach as our Lord did? 
Christ taught from the ‘old Scrip- 
jtures—He had none other . Yet we 
hear that these old Scriptures have to 
| be discarded as of no use to our 
|Palah the “t living. I wonder. Jere- 


full 
picture of Israel today in Chapter 2, 
verses 26 and 27. Look it up and 
read. And while you have your 
Bible look up St. Matthew 5:17,18. 
Either we accept the whole Bible as 
God’s written word or not at all. I 
have just read a book, “The Gay 
Crusader,” by Ralph Connor, which 
brings force to our present-day 
situation in the church, and I wiil 
quote just a few of his passages: ““The 
Christian Church. What has the 
Christian Church to do with economic 
recovery?” 

“The science of economics is the 
science of humanity working together 
for their common good. What an 
opportunity for the Church! Millions 
of people are in misery, the after- 
math of war—war which the Church 
|failed to prevent, mark you! What 
ja chance for the Church to effec- 
|tively proclaim the gospel of peace! 
Every nation in the world today is 
haunted with the fear of its neigh- 
bors—-what a chance for the law of 


England and France were not/The dreams of youth were shattered, | Universal brotherhood!” 


| “The Church is constituted for the 
|cross. But will the Church take the 
cross? I doubt it. Its pews are filled 
;With people who love comfort and 
shrink from the cross, and too many 


wee don’t seem to be alive to their 
oO Mad 


“As I see it, this present world 
|condition offers the greatest chance 
in a thousand years to the Christian 
| Church to win the world for the 
|Kingdom of God.” 

The foregoing, the reader will 
| agree, cracks the whip to those who 
|should be about our Father’s busi- 
ness. What we want today are men 
who are leaders; men who are not 
afraid to teach as Christ taught, who, 
when necessary, can use the scourge 
to cleanse the Church as Christ did. 

Before concluding, may I draw at- 
tention to a text used at the service 
held in St. Paul’s Cathedral, Londo: 
during the recent crisis? You will fin 
it in Psalms 62:8, “Trust in Him at all 


times, ye peomie, pour out your 
hearts before Him . God is a refuge 
for us. Selah.” Here you have 


present-day Israel in its time of 
threatening disaster turning to God. 
May it not be well to ask ourselves 
why it is that both our British parlia- 
ments, Commons and Lords, com- 
mence each day’s session with the 
Lord's Prayer and the reading of the 
67th Psalm. Truly the Anglo-Saxon 


Celtic people’s require a_ great 
awakening before it is too late. What 
we need are men of the t of 
Luther, Cromwell, Wesley, ox, 


etc., men who can lead this old worl 
out of the rut into which it has 


plunged, 
A. P. TURNER. 
Valhalla Centre, Alberta, 
October 26, 1938, 


porters take out the poor English, the 
wrong word, they punctuate and para- 
graph, and many a new member has 
been surprised to find what a good 
speaker he really is-—when he reads 
Hansard. 


Strange as it may appear, Canada 
had an official report of Parliamentary 
debates before the Mother of Parlia- 
ments at Westminster. Originally it 
was a crime in England to report Par- 
liament; then in 1768-74 sat the “un 
reported parliament.” About this 
time a monthly pamphlet was furtivel, 
published, and a bitter debate waged 
on the reporting of speeches. 

Meanwhile, Luke Hansard, a Nor- 
wich printer, had arrived in London. 
He became a compositor in the employ 
of John Hughes, printer to the House 
of Commons, worked up to a partner- 
ship, and finally bought out the firm. 

In 1804 William Cobbett published 
the first serious attempt at verbatim 
reports of Parliamentary speeches 
Hansard did his printing, and when 
Cobbett ran into difficulties HansarJ 
started publication of Hansard’s Par- 
liamentary Debates. He employed his 
own reporters, struggling to make ends 
meet until the Government, in 1878, 
contributed a grant of 3,000 pounds 
sterling toward the work. In 1889 the 
company went bankrupt, and a new 
company, the Hansard Publishins 
Union Limited, was formed. It was 
not until 1909 that the British Parlia- 
ment took over the reporting and pub- 
lishing of its own debates, although a- 
far back as 1887 T. P. O'Connor had 
pleaded for verbatim reporting. 

In Canada there were no official re- 
cordings of the debates of the Parlia- 
ments of Upper and Lewer Canada, 
but in 1805 the published “Confedera- 
tion Debates” recorded the proceedings 
at Quebec, in the previous year, of the 
interprovincial conference, and proved 
the value of verbatim reports, 

Then, as now, the Senate did nog get 
the same amount of attention in the 
public prints as did, and do, the Com- 
mons, so in the late sixties the Senate 
arranged with John Bourinot to pre- 
pare a separate report, which was, 
however, hot verbatim. In 1876 a con- 
tract for official reporting was award- 
ed to George and Andrew Holland, who 
carried on the work unui awit. In 
1917 the Senate took over its own re- 
porting. 

in’ Confederation year, Alexande« 
Mackenzie and Joseph Howe brought 
up the question of reporting debates in 
the Commons, but the report of a spe- 
cial committee was voted down. Up 
to 1370 the only records were press 
clippings, pasted up, and known a; 
“scrapbook Hansards.”’ In 1870 James 
Cotton of the Ottawa Times issued u 
compilation taken from press reports, 
and Parliament purchased a number v* 
copies. They were known es the “Coc- 
ton Debates’ of 15i0, 1871 and 1s72. 
There was also Thompson's “Mirror of 
Parliament” published from day tu 
day. If the page was filled before the 
copy was completed, Thompson stop- 


ped at the bottom right hand corner of ! 
the page—even in the middle of a sen- | 


tence—and finished the printing of ii 
the next day. 

In 1875 a contract was awarded at 
$500 a week for the reporting of the 
Commons debates, and in 1880, twerity- 
nine years before the British Parlia- 
ment adopted a similar plan, the Can- 
adian Commons established its own 
“Hansard.” It was described to the 
British committee by Lord Lee of 
Farnham as the best in the world. 

Today Canada’s Hansard 
over five million words every session. 
So perfect is the system that a membe} 
speaking when the House closes at 11 
p-m. has the printed verbatim report 
on his desk at 11 o'clock the next 
morning. 

A Hansard reporter “takes” for tea 
minutes, then has fifty minutes to dic- 
tate his “take” to a typist. 
rings and he goes on for another ten 
minutes. As his “take” is typed out ‘t 
goes to the Hansard editor, and igs 
there put into final and perfect form. 
The member may see the typed copy 
and change words and perhaps phrases 
but he must not change the sense w 
the context. Sometimes, but very sel. 
dom, a member rises in the House, 
claims he has been misreported and 
asks that a correction be made. What 
he says is recorded, but it does not ne- 
cessarily mean that Hansard is 
changed, 

Hansard reporters must be men of 
wide knowledge, because a member 
may speak on any subject under the 
sun, As a member has the right to 
speak in French there must also be a 
French as well as an English reporter 
“on the floor.” To complicate mat- 
ters, a staff of translators is kept busy 
translating all English speeches into 
French and all French into English, 
for Hansard has tv o complete editions, 

The Hansard editor must combine 
the culture and knowledge of a univer- 
sity professor, a business executive, a 
man-about-town and just an everyday 
citizen. He must be tactful with the 
member who claims he didn't say this, 
that .. the other thing (it may em- 
barass him in his riding), but {f the 
reporter has recorded it the report may 
not be changed, since other members 
may have heard him say the same 
thing. A member may make a correc- 
tion on the floor of the House, but he 
cannot change Hansard. 

The final edited copy goes over *« 
the Government Printing Bureau where 
it becomes the business of the King's 
Printer. Each full day's debates are 
stitched together, and are sent back tu 
the Commons for distribution. The 
Senate system is parallel, the Senate 
having its own staff of reporters, and 
its own issue of Hansard in both 
languages. 

During the session, as each day's re- 
port comes back from the King’s Prin- 


records | 


The bell} 


THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 38, 1938 


ter, the Hansard editorial staffs pre- 
pare the index. These indices are a 
marvel of detail and accuracy and may 
have as many as 30,000 references. For 
instance, the Prime Minister mentions 
Anticosti Island in the Budget debate 
It is indexed under budget, under Mr. 
King’s name, under Anticosti, and so 
forth. 

At the end of the session, when Han- 
sard has been thoroughly revised and 
indexed, the permanent edition is pre- 
pared. It is reprinted, with all cor- 
rections included, on large sixteen pag» 
sheets (eight pages’ on each = side). 
These then pass through a folding ma- 
chine and become “signatures"—-six 
teen page pamphiets. These signa- 
tures are gathered, collected and sewn 
together and the backs are then 
“smashed,” “smashing” being the bind- 
ery term for squeezing the back of the 
sewn signatures, made bulky by tho 
stitching, in a special press, to forse 
out the air and flatten the threads, so 
that thickness of both front and back 
of the book will be equal, 

After “smashing” the volume is then 
trimmed on three sides, and after being 
glued-up, has its back rounded on the 
rounding and,backing machine, prepa- 
ratory to being covered and und. 
Two pieces of stout millboard form the 
covers, and over these is glued a spe- 
cially cut piece of “PX” Book Cloth, + 
pyroxylin coated binding material 
made for the bookbinding trade by the 
“Fabrikoid” Division of Canadian In- 
dustries Limited. This cloth is tough 
yet pliable, and will stand an unusual 
amount of wear and tear. Because of 
its water resistant qualities it will not 
stain easily and will resist the possible 
attacks from the “bookworms” of the 
insect world. 

The books are then cased in and 
finally put in the book press, where 
they remain under pressure until dry 
and from which they emerge to travel 
across the seven seas to libraries all 
Every Member of 
Parliament is entitled to a set, and few 
works are so frequently referred to. 
The Parliamentary Librarian keeps 4 
dozen sets on hand dating back t» 
1880, and has other sets in reserve. 

The books have to stand frequent 
handling and much abuse. A little 

page boy dashes into the library—a 
debate is on, and a member who is 
about to speak wants to find out what 
so-and-so said last year. The Library 
clerk pulls down the volume; the bor 
rushes off—possibly he drops it in the 
corridor. The member opens it, turns 
vver its pages, finds what he wants, 
and slaps another book on top to mark 
the place. All this is not easy on the 
binding, but it stands up. From 1875 
to 1889 the printing of Hansard was 
done by a firm of local printers while 
the binding was undertaken by an- 
other company, but in 1889 the work of 
printing and binding government pub- 
lications was taken over by the present 
Government Printing Bureau and the 
| King’s Printer and his men have been 
| binding Hansard ever since, and they 
demand a binding material that will 
| stand abuse and the wear and tear of 
time. 

No sooner has the Government 
Printing Bureau completed one set o1 
| Hansard and turned out 3,000 sets in 
| Saonem and French than another ses- 
sion is upon them and the work goes 
on again. There may be one, two, 
three, four, five or even six volumes 
to a session, but no matter the quan- 
tity or the quality of verbiage Hansard 
must record it and the King’s Printer 
must print it .. ....e and on time. 

Only twice has Hansard put in ‘any 
coment of its own in its report; once 
when a man on the roof of the old Par- 
liament Building dropped a pail of ice 
through the glass and nearly followed 
it himself, and again when the build- 
ings were destroyed by fire in 1917 
and the reporting of the debates was 
carried on up to the moment the ses- 
sion broke up in ‘the smoke of tho 
burning building. Hansard wrote 
“Fire,” and ducked with the rest.— 
C-I-L Oval. 


over the world. 


METHODS OF PROTECTING 
RASPBERRIES FOR WINTER 


(Experimental Farm News) 

With the exception of two or three 
of the very hardy varieties, rasp- 
berries are severely injured most 
winters at the Rosthern Experimental 
Station, Sask., if not protected, states 
F. V. Hutton, the Superintendent. 
Even the very hardiest sorts are 
affected if the winter is severe and 
jthere are no deep snow drifts for 
protection. 

Turning down the tops and cover- 
ing with soil- has given ample pro- 
tection to all varieties tes and if 
worked systematically does not en- 
tail a great deal of work. In any 
case it is better to grow and protect 
one acre properly than to grow sev- 
eral acres of an inferior variety and 
Possibly have killing as well. 

Pruning to about five or six 
healthy new canes to a hill should be 
}done before attempting to cover. In 
covering it is more convenient if two 
men are available, one to bend the 
canes down and the other to put a 
shovelful of earth on the tip. More 
soil can be added to completely cover 
the canes, but if snow is usually 
abundant it may only be necessary 
to cover a short way back from the 
tips. In bending down there will be 
little danger in breaking the canes 
if all at the hill are grasped together 
and bent down, tips first, allowing 
the centre to bow up. The covering 
is of course done just before freeze- 
|4p, or after the canes are well 
ripened. The canes are uncovered 
when the frost is out and the soil dry 
enough to work conveniently. 

After uncovering the canes need 
not be forced up, but will straighten 
themselves in a few hours. 

This method of protection is illus- 
trated and explained in the latest 
report from the Rosthern Station. 


MASS PRODUCTION OF WAR 
EQUIPMENT !S INDICATED 


President Roosevelt said he was 
making an entirely new study of the 
United Siataes’ national defence needs 
and that until it was completed he 
could not estimate next year’s budget. 

The president told a press confer- 
ence new technical developments in 
national defence measures required a 
complete study of defensive requira- 
ments, 

He said the reason for the reasses¢- 
ment of these needs began to take 
shape about a year ago because of in- 
formation coming in in connection 
with world events. He said the ques- 
tion was forced to a head in the past 
month. In response to a question he 
said the new information was of a 
technical rather than a political na- 
ture, 

One of the things being studied, he 
said, was that of mass production of 
war equipment, including airplanes, 
power and other items. He said the 
production question was something 
nhew and intimated one phase to be 
studied was standardization of plane 
proflustion, which some countries hava 
already adoptefn, 


U. & ALFALFA CROP 


Owing to the considerably reduced 
production of alfalfa seed in the U; 8. 
this season, there should be a good de- 
mand for Canadian seed, atateg the 
Canadian Trade Commissioner at New 
York. ‘The reduction in the U.S. alf- 
alfa crop was caused largely by heavy 
infestation of grasshoppers in the more 
northern producing areas and by ex- 
cessive rains in regions east of the 
Mississippi. 


The new car models will be out sooa. 
There is a rumor that the choke has 
been put on the back seat driver, ° 


OP AO Pee 


ee SCTE 
TPES ET TS RE 


THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1938 


in the skirts, and is, besides, rather | 


THE NORTHERN TRIBUNE 


ROVAL WINTER FAIR OPENS AT 


PAGE THREE 


PHYSICIANS CLAIM TO HAVE BLUE GRAMA GRASS 


Report Moisture 


gray and scraggly-looking in winter TORONTO ON NOVEMBER iI5TH ISOLATED GERM THAT IS THE —_ 
Timel Hints From the time. We prefer caragana, saska- Een *,¢ CAUSE OF TOOTH DECAY flue rama grass is ene of the 
toons or spruce, not to mention sev- This year's Royal Agricultural Win Conditions In I he > most importent native grasses found 
By eral other — of more or less yd — i ao at Toronto on Isolation of the germ that causes | OT th — araes prairies of southern 
B romise. orman Ross of Indian Nevember # to be still more exten- 4 tooth decay was reported by Dr. P, H,| B@*katchewan and Alberta. Originally 
w. Oo. Albright eaverlodge Sub-Station ead or oe cotoneaster, thought it is tare - prises’ Butay yen ey West As Variable Belding, dentinat and hin ereeher, lAeut mM a ay? fh FF high tassetande 4 
“ ” not absolutel . er prize ormer year lL. J. Belding, physics: ttuched to | Mexico, blue grama grass has extende 
UT (9A PEBACURE AS WELL AS A OUTY TO SERVE lit Aa aamitiea that Bor tn cogpre A On scooupt of the improveemnts , Pp, the naval aadaeren at Anaagelis, Ma. ste vanes to the more northern regions 
ee ee RE POUR AR NIE EN eV AON eqn spruce are slow- win th tart made in the Royal Winter Fair classes, Autumn sub-soil moisture conditions The germ ia nurtured, they said on] of the United States and Canada Al- 
Pe aiirer A “ may be a nse oe ~ hoe i e ee wanes the farmer usually pine his! foods made from cereale, mostiy whea though Be. ee — , alled _~ , 
p pec arger display o Veatock * antie opes for oxt . ‘op, re ce fro co and oats , , ermontation o crane ra rue buffalo graes ia not 
We'll doubtless rue the day we!mellowed by a few weeks in stor- time will be saved by planting sved- pated, and entries from new competi ro to anaotlans over y glint shoes i NO BP rhe thhe satiate found in Canada and does not com 
burnt up so much of our spruce. ‘age, made really good pie and really ings and we should do it in the tors, notably in dairy cattle and sneep, | provinces, a survey shows, Saskatche | whieh attacks the tooth cnamel. The | [UrMler ferth than southern Montane 
é , eee A | good sauce this year. The Hibernal spring. have been received, Also it is expect } wan and Alberta reported conditions| germ can be eliminated by processing and the Dakotas 
Enough to eat but not a mouthful is supposed to be a poor fruit. In One row makes the best hedge, but rd thet weer ner Sree Prines msovar 1) fairly promising but Manitobe farmera! the cereal, they said ' yere a Sper 
Ps A 4 > slang ane r ah olumbin a | e . Wi considered he o loo The ade al) repor 0 oe B at t is ale ihat one of he i “5 
ete ore can oe auntie anpanion ocan be a » Bee yl pg AO a taller < - BB 44 nine provinces of Canada will be re favorable at the ‘eens vw cig caate ‘et Teatal oo ie +. of 4 a - ¢| siven by ‘Louis, xiv for the tutta ing 
apple- 7 presented, hHlowever, spearance of ” ow o : ‘ es of the creat palace at Versaille wo 
Considerable breaking has been hungry palates . This year it seemed |8Pruce or other trees behind it. The new Seed and Givin Show pre- selan Uolere treme stetiees ont © ny} . They Toate ved that their discovery | (Net tt would pr ovide employment “tor 
done in the British Columbia Block quite good. Perhaps, like cheese, it mises to assume an importance com- > moisture Guring next epring and in the | might open the way for a new tuds WH workmen over many years 
this year, according to M. S. Morrell, jneeds curing. mensurate with Canada international) growing seneon will alter the Manitoba) of the dietary diseases, such aa pepti 


Provineial Government Agent, Pouce 


Conserving fodder supplies will be!so plentifully year after year at Fort result, It is sometimes possible to dig | tegic points to enforce the law, and “Manitoba lacks that reserve mois- | te Spanish war he doubted if the Phone 219 Box 1904 
a real problem this winter. Strong | Resolution, on Great Slave Lake, | Potatoes late in the day, afer the top | through the first convicion just re-| ture and is more than usually depead- surgent airemn would have caused t 
claims are made by some stockmen seem to have given up the ghost. A | *°!! has thawed out, and escape injury. corded at Lethbridge, Alberta, under| ent on next spring elements. Tt ck | mage they did 
| year ago last winter a severe winter The logical control of low tempera- | the licensing provision of the Act, pub-| of moisture this fall doesn't mean we ae. 


in favor of chaffing roughage and 
grinding or rolling grain. This | 
column invites the experience of its 
readers. 


Coupe Prof Manley Champlin sult of the improved crop and economie Weather bureau officials sald th») citus, pernicious anaemia and rhes -_———- --- ae 
* : says the ° |! eondit ons, the entries from the Prairs ecords ¢ © , ’ che 7 
wee Field Husband Department of the From Frost Injury Provinces promise to ¢ reate a reser | Hept. “i pA dene yo me . Bimmy Bay "tbe way of destroying the germ 
Co-operation means more than [type J of katchewan found The space devoted to poultry has been!) with 140, Alberta 1.72 and Manitoba! they said, was by fermentation ot lk Wh t If Si k 
merely getting things done. It means by experiment that it id to use the taken for what will prove to be an)! with 346. far below normal alization of the cereal before consump a 1c ness 
a spirit of mutual istance, en- barnyard manure p uced, and also Low temperature injury to potatoes outstanding industrial exhibit by th» Girain firms also reported Manitou! thon, | 
dering friendliness and good will. |found that 12-ton dressings were/is a serious problem. to farmers in (o. ey GS SATOres OF the poultry Indus: | wheat lands suffering from @ late sure | or B d A id 
’ ‘ conse profitable than either light Or | practically every potato section of a oe. ea the pay | Gee ":? "the “ : me os ay | GEST WAY TO COMBAT . e coh ent 
a n "ans 7 ne hes ee x nem G5 ¢ c > a © ene pro irain Co at na review of Auguat) i 
The sprightly red fruits of the ol ip Sen ae, emuce « rage oo Lanaee sro oe type of in-) qucers and manufacturers of supplies jand September, described the ian mthatie | AIR RAIOS iS TO MEET 
buffalo berry, Shepherdia  argentea, |'Tee © eed seeds it pa apply it| jury may aiso ¢ fect dealers, transport Other new features aro the recasting | situation as 57 per cent of normal, Sas- | INVADERS IN THE AI 
make rather pleasant eating after fresh. Rotting for two months in a companies; and consumers Losses | and enlarging of the Flower Show: the! katchewan 9% and Alberta 98 i a ; to Ss 
they have been well ripened an pan made pile cooweres the weed pte me enheny — By wf Me ae a oy Se —_ improvement of the fruit display and Saskatchewan government  officias aes 
e . Save oO vw, e end o e shipping 6 ene . ‘ he perfo 20 pf te ary : - - A Great W etes who ha er 
touched by frost. pee Nem. 7 o- e surface of the) voason, but also in poor stands result- ns petty &e - A yon By h r varie ar thr — = oo noe ye a the tinised the ‘terrible ‘engine a 
| ° ing from the use of frost injured seed, hae 4 pe vie by “ates pee oy . patent -- a4 oe nd , : a i 
° officers eo # are co : “«~ ‘ es easte r . finds the be oF an t6f ome no , 
Ideal autumn © weather, was re- ° ° potatoes the next season. Frost injury eg Ae « Sa + pry Rayne 9 ‘ a un Bagg on tern part of the pro pa = wee _— — ee ee t our 
ported from Fort Vermilion under A mound of earth around the base] is not always visible on the outside of fire, to con.pete aguinat Canadian| since n gh abs Ba 1 nave cocurred Col. BK. J. C. Sehmidiin, director of 
Gate of October 18, with autumn of apple and other tree trunks whose the potatoes, and may take the form officers. Ee seonaring ry on soll Ai oP ngage oe te engineering services lepartment Income > 
field work well finished up on the bark is attractive to mice will turn 1 pee hg om her pepe bo wat h is often an | ir releane Nov. 1 described conditing, | national defence, toid members of th ad | 
j ‘ difficu © distinguish from symptoms . De a Inginee s stitute © ana 
Substation thetg. ee mony of he rodents aside when they associated with other disorders such as | HAVING NO LICENSE— ao cute to favoraine Teles ~ - a : : “* ae \re on ‘otecter 8 
are burrowing beneath the first fall] jy uists. wilts, net necrosis aac ate | PRODUCE DEALER FINED Manitoba farmers in areas just] Terente that in spi of advance you prote i igainst 
The chill November wind eoom ee snow . Alt the better, no doubt, | Gna trowninn, , ath south of Winnip « declared the ‘soil pana Be - b ng ca le Bm gyn ion rr? Ae y an Rag 
- 7 asm ROD ‘ ‘ ‘ it nie ” coco . P ‘ . Ce . ene . wee fut sed as r 4 be wo ai -! eal 
shrinks the milk flow. When cattle e moun s moisten and per Aaseréing t &. BR. Mure, of thé| «xm etn | Was so dry they wer unabi to a ne poet ta 6 uae agape ne. 3 ty 4H , ste n Doc 
stand humpbacked_ and 6 sstaring- {mitted to freeze solid. Where mice Domini Labor a a “ j No dealer shall ship, buy, accep or) Plish fall plowing proper! hor mot / . Or Lawyers, Dentists, Tea- 
coated the owner is losing milk and |are numerous the base of the trunk || m . oa Bo oratory of | lant Patho-| offer to accept or otherwise deal ta than a foot beneath the surface at 1914-18 chet Clergymen, etcec., should 
. ORY, 1arlottetown, P. EE. 1, potatoes! any produce shipped from or to a| seme points the earth held no moisture Bach advance in weapons of offen be protected one ¢ 7 
meat. should be first wrapped with build-| dug from part of a field before a frost point outside the province in which he | at all he said, has been offset by correspond ‘LIFET 7 va oe ae 
OR aT ing paper—not tar paper, for that/ remained in sound condition through: | carries on business unless ry cael $ “There is a diatinect below-normal|!"*% !'™pProvements in defensive arma Levees CORE pS 
Wisconsin Experiment Station|may induce sunscald. Where neither | out the storage season, whereas th? | jiconsed by the Minister of Agricul- | moisture condition in| Manitoba this | ™on' cies. Ask us for particulars. 
finds that boron deficiency may|wrapping nor mounding has been at-| Ppetatoes dug from the remainder of | turea,” ; fall,” Hon. D. L. Campbell, Manitoba Best defence againat raid 
sometimes cause blackspot of beets|tended to the first snow should be erst = —s a frost were rotted sev-| Krom time to time, complatats have| minister of agriculture, sald. “I con- | Gecl@red, was to meet the invaders it Bowen & Clarke 
and that applying sulphur to certain trampled firm immediately around = PP sa } ne gy = ag nk AM eel been made by Heensed dealers that] sider that one of the biggest sing! won 7 ome ; S me hed thet 08 | 
os ¢, : 6 . ry by com: | some dealers were evading the reg factors in the next year's ero the | 2" ” ‘ Sot OF EAAt PUrAUst ips | 
— S27 2 tie ke per |Gre trunks > «e ing into contact with the frozen top | tions ‘either aaerately a, dou motnt ure w“ e get the fall netere. Tease could cope successfully with the at Office: Imperial Bank Bldg. | 
red fe pota e soll. If frozen tubers and soil are car-| ignorance. However, with the sta-|ing up reserve moisture acts Hke a CO ln eth a aes fot , Grande Prairie, Alta. 
] on yaae moon ‘ howe 


The crab apple trees which bore 


with little snow killed them to the 
ground . Sprouts came the following 


summer and were still alive this past | 


Protect Potatoes 


ried into storage, injury is bound to 


ture injury necessitates protecting the 
potatoes from frosts. Thus it is im- 
portant to harvest a crop in advance 
of the time when such low tempera- 


status in grain growing. ond, as a re- 


| tioning of Government officers at stra- 


dicity has been given re 
gulations, 

At Lethbridge, the police 
istrate recently fined a 


irding the re- 


court mag- 
local 


produce 


pieture ulcer, gall stones, arthritie, append 


bank account in any other business. 


can't get a crop next year. The crop| LARGE SUM OF UNITED STATES 
will come along providing we get satis- 


, MONEY INVESTED IN CANAD, | 
factory weather conditions during the inteaiit . 


spring and growing season 19i1cae Mitte tavdatmmehta aie 


Tell and Sell with a Tribune Advt 


C. Stredulinsky 


Merchant Tailor 


dae: BY spring, but early in the summer of) tures usually occur. While no definite | dealer $100 and $11.50 cos C8 ; in ¢ 
. P > » e saler § J coats, or two Mr. Campbell, who said he was like], era) 
For killing seedling weeds and 1938 they began to die off. Perhaps | date can be set, experience has shown| months iprisonment in default, in that] every other farmer who believed crops penny Ry Far eager rae oes Sepa FRENCH DRY CLEANING 
tough-rooted clumps of perennials the dry summer was hard on them. | that digging operations should be com-! “He being a dealer did ship produce! never came up to expectations, declar- poet: ne la hs a : oy d States Phone 111 P.O. Box 1071 
growing in loose, deeply tilled soil | Rev. Father Duchesne, O.M.I., in-/| pleted before mid-October if the field| from a point within the provinee in] ed the condition of the land this fall] jargesat block “aa tee anand A e be de | Grande Prairie, Alberta 
the wire weeder has given good forms us that the weather was frost hazard is to be avoided. When | which he carries on business to a point) was distinetly below the long-time] 4 survey by the United at ‘ y , on a 
satisfaction this year on the Sub- desperately dry and cold until the | frost is evident or suspected, all af-/| outside the province, namely the pro- | average. Good fall rains after October | Ge Com) jd Poy eee vet awe 
station farm It does its best work end of July so that nothing grew be- fected tubers should be sorted out im-| vince of Saskatchewan without ob- | 20th were not very beneficial as freeze The - molete  statiat spre 
if d b ‘ kl ‘fore that date Even the North has mediately after digging, and this por-| taining a license, contrary to the pro-| Up usually had set in and moisture | .y ba. t! + rig id ti. mweever : cos LADit « | 
rawn obris y- a" lits reverses tion of the crop should not be mixed! visions of the Act.” }eould not seep into the earth vo v4 ot u .¢ eT eee . me Canadian | o 
U tai heth an: beet bb | . “as ae Ph, acento dug before frost sets in. ! The case which had heen remanded — ——— — _—- oe “ip oe hens ch ay ¥ rhe niaed gre “ Lockerbie 
neertain whether to bring rubber | furthermore, potatoes dug after frost! from time to time sinc last) June | . ° = Sour | 
boots or moccasins, raincoat or furs, | Grass Seed Production should not be used for seed unless | created considerable attention in the | Multiplying than 500,000,000 in the Went Indiew. | 
Cecil Tice, British Columbia Field! what would you think of sowing thorough examination reveals the en- | western provinces, and was _ closely TY . | Hole 
y tire absence of low temperature injury. | followed by the licensed dealers who te survey also disclosed that ex 
Crops Commissioner, Victoria, ar-|40 acres with crested wheatgrass for y Ayhh ; enditures of Canad 
ived in the P October 25 to find | + er This precautionary measure is based | trade between Alberta, Saskatchewan ood Seed [4 eer Ce, nee Werverens a 
bal n eae i ith oper fle n | the purpose of raising certified seed? | upon field tests Which demonstrated| and the United States. The recent | the United States account for , PLUMBI NG 
aimy weather wit some owers Should I find it difficult to get the that the use of such tubers resulted | conviction has served as an intimation | umelln siedtehinnins thirds of the total travel outla b 
still in bloom, the roads good and the | seed threshed by the ordinary thresh- | in both misses and weak plants. to fruit and vegetable dealers that they | ars ; compienere i the United. States, .witts) —and— 
P I y| Two years ago the Okotoks Junior} United States traveller: 
fall work well rounded up. ing outfits? I have to hire my work The crop should be stored in rooms, must conform heir mercantile actions | Wheat Club d iaene <arl pe apy sce Pads yh 2 pepe ha Act aban ty 
eee don I did think of sowing this 40 | having a temperature ranging between tp the thnk of dhe Bruit, Veretahiees.: ea ub starte operations with | spend here half of the total travel out- | HEATING 
Flax and alfalfa were threshed saree with wheat next coring What 25 to 40 degrees F. By so doing, the | and Honey Act of Canada i be geo ether sey te lay of the United States | 
2 | " potatoes will not turn sweet ar »C- — --— . c ely ~ > appre Ms 10718 10lst Stree 
under ideal weather conditions onj|jis your opinion of crested wheat- |! c sweet and nec NEWSPAPER WRITER SLIPPED | 8 reet 


October 26. The flax had been left 


hearts of the flowers were attractive, 


grass as a permanent. hay and pas- 


Generally, crested wheatgrass _ is 


rosis will not develop. Potatoes trans. | 


ported during the cold months should 


ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS 


known as Red Bobs 222, supplied by 


|}the Alberta Wheat Pool. EDMONTON 


SOMETHING OVER PUBLISHER | 


| up the reference, for it read ‘A cold 


mn: wth | ? — 4 
a Gene ete re acto HE for bee ne we nave Saved be provided with protection against| The three “essential” elements of P. Berger, leader of the Okotoks 7 

have been cut ‘and threshed canter ' rome not muc 8 ere.—A.S.e.,| frost at all times. They should be i fertility are nitrogen, phosphoric acid club, has figures to show that in two Chrisopher Morley the America | 
1 Lymburn, Alta. carried in a heated car and loaded so!|and potash. ‘These elements have re- | years members of the club produced | #uthor, at one time conducted a column oeanennnnatenervnenscunvsenensuorivnssnenenvesneennnravenvoerannervnepensess conen mneee, 
than it was. A nice sample of al-| “Ans.: Brome does not do quite so|as to insure the free circulation of air ceived this name, not because they are|52,000 bushels of pure seed. on the Philadelphia Public Ledger, | 5 
falfa seed was obtained. well on some lands as on others, but| throughout. When it is known that|any more essential to the growth of hy then owned by the late Cyrus H. K | 3 
tatoes have . 4 This is the type of seed improve-| '\ 4 RATES $1.00 UP A 
aud Sip we have never been fully satisfied | Potatoes have been undercooled they | crops than the other nine or ten elem- ‘ at a 4 Curtis, also publisher of the Saturday | 3 
3 " , cited . .;/ment work that some 1,500 boys, who| ;.. . a z 
In spite of occasional temperatures | with any reasons suggested for it. must not be handled until it is certain | ents entering into the composition 07 | 4), bers of the 70 Junior Wheat | @vening Post | 3 
as low as 26.9° and 26 8° Fa hybrid | We do know that on poor soils nurse- that the temperature is above’ the plant tissues, but becaus. they are the | re mem ers of | e unior eat Curtis by piqued at something whi ol = 
4 " bay 4 freezing point. three elements which nust be con- | Clubs operating in Alberta this year,| Morley wrote and gave him his notte | 3 
tea and hybrid perpetual roses with-|crop seeding is likely to result in rns comes nt te te > Rave bees Selma to better the otputl ie che inet sche ne on n his not! ; 
out a vestige of artificial protection | poor hay crops in the average season. Se eee eee | et pel aoe Se SO? tae heat te 1 ae » ASS COOTER OI as to publis 3 
‘ | ductiveness is to be maintained under |Of wheat from Alberta farms. in the Ledger, Morley inserted an ap 3 
were blooming in the Substation | Possibly A.S.E.’s soil needs a suitable SMALL POTATO CROP | ordinary systems of farming. Scientific agriculturists have com-| parently meaningless line: Taming ot 3 
garden on October 27. Though outer |legume to make it highly productive —_——— a the, ost  Saenlnbbeeen af S mansad an, Uae teak tath whatever othe Shrew, Act [V, Scene {, Line 96 ; 
petals were somewhat withered, the |of brome, wheat or oats. According to the first estimate just | CARNIVEROUS PLANTS |Junior Wheat Club is operating im-| Headers chuckled when they looket | 2 
= 
FI 


and plenty of buds were ready to/|not so well adapted as brome to the] is placed at 86,648,000 cwt. This is Most plants in Canada obtain the|being sown in th istrict. - | world, Curtis, in every office but thine Salemi ia tiie 
burst. Peace River district. It is noted for| the smallest crop on record since 1915,| nitrogen necessary for their growth sig Bag RR. "en tae cele 7 and therefore fire! Winnipeg Tri Corner Jasper and 104th 
eee surviving under extremely drouthy ro y 14 ag cent below that of > | from the soil, but there are three fami- lthese Junior Wheat Clubs, the quality | bune EDMONTON 
Short crops in recent years were 38, lies of Canadi: ylants yhich utilize | ~») ~ my 
ie seen meee eee oe pdaectot inf 7. Sonn wave tad 000,000 ewt. in 1985, and- 39,000,060 | the bodies of smll_animals for. this /0f, the wheat seed being sown on|A LITTLE DISCUSSION OVER 
improved during August and Sep-/to root-ro njury. me Rav ewt. in 1932 and in 1986. The Setaher | ‘pose. These carnivero lants in-|Alberta farms is steadily improving REGAL VISIT TO TORONTO Right in the heart of the 
tember. Corn, beans, squash, pump- {splendid success with it as a seed a ~~ a6. ctober | purpose. 1ese carniverous plants in- . 3 ! 
. ’ ’ ’ ialt Mostly it has been grown first estimate of the 1938 United States | clude the sundews, the  butterworts|from year to year. —— | z City Shopping Centre 
kin, plenty of ripe tomatoes and | specia y: f thi Yield potato crop is 373,275,000 bushels, a! and bladderworts and the piteher SS Neither Toronto nor any other cit z 
long, crisp celery were enjoyed injin rows for Ss purpose. €1ds | decrease of 20,014,000 bushels on 1937.! plants, or side saddle flowers. GRAIN CROPS ACREAGE is entitled to claim a prominent t 
profusion, while even a small melon |have been good and prices excellent, - — in a ten bak elett at tha. ine and 
ripened in the open without water- | but perhaps by the time one got into rmmmeabitioens Gibeh.td Canad. te bose . without 
ing or codling of any description. A wrocveee Ex Pacey Soe, A bi 1, The betimates of the arene sown to saying that Toronto peopl 1 THE HOME OF SERVIC! 
good garden may contribute a large price may be down to abou cen e the principal grain crops as shown by[ proud and delighted to have the | ND COMFORT 
’ 4 ° the annual June survey are now avail- P * as muests for as long as it 2 A? OMPOR’ 
itt: gee Radia pery,* —— OE cain separator threshes able for the Prairie Provinces. The] convenient for them to stay, but when | i 
area sown to wheat is estimated ata c¢ unication to that effeet 1} } . , . 
A. R. Albert of the Soils Depart- crested wheatgrass nicely. The seed 24.946,000 acres, an increase of 347.- ae yo teaphe ch - Hoon ity vn soe canneanannnanenneiseicancannanne et aneenreresersMpannc veuenensnets a 
ment of the University of Wisconsin | requires considerable experience in MINIATURE CAMERAS aur tavat, oc 4.8 Ger ena te Bi B+ boon sorward 6 those in ch ve t 
claims that proper fertilization helps |cleaning and the use of a Carter disc with the 1987 acreage of 24,599,000.] Toronto's importunities should yo 
to make lowland crops vigorous and|or indent machine is amet, indis- EE Oats at 8,518,000 acres show a slight] The suggestion which has emanates | WHEN IN VANCOUVER 
a little more hardy. Time after time, pensable in finally dressing it. reduction of 61,000 acres, The barley} from the Board of Control that Mayo Be safe and comfortable. Make 
he observes, fertilized corn, potatoes,| We expect that brome or sweet acreage at 3,687,000 is larger by 124,-[ Day should Write to Lord Tweedsmal Lona a ee eet 
f clover for seed would pay equally TOO acres compared with the 1937} stressing Tronto's claim to @ prominen* our reservations at the 
sunflowers and other crops have { ‘w 4 ‘ 
survived light frosts with little in- | well as crested wheatgrass, all things acreage. Rye shows a reduction of} place in the royal plans is the type 
j hil rby unfertilized areas | considered, and would suggest pro- 153.200 acres, and flaxseed, a decrease} thing which has earned for this cit | IOTEL 
ave shown + al 1 |ceeding with caution unless one can of 20,600 acres. the opprobrious sobriquet of Hogtown 
agi tota oss or COVOSY | stand to plunge. There is money in PETS CRTC fe Without any thought as to the Na 
. : tio | eharacter of the visit, it is pre 
LT aed | ieee eee premantion, Oy scar Hee WReAr OREASS pened Gat & Settee im hip annse mbeuid I iU DSON 
i ’ ° a] nd . be fo ‘ded oO tav th 
some of the highly mechanized, Honeysuckle Hedge Not Favored oe PF poeredbapecse — 8 as Phase b eased . defitely form part .of Their Majesti FIRE PROOF 
highly specialized grain farms where| 1 would like to plant a honeysuckle ee ee eee cases anee tale ee For. Telogrant Newly @urnished And Decorated 
everything hinges on the dollar are | hedge on north side of house. Which previous year of 2.420.000 acres, and FINLAND’S BIG CROP Rooms Single and Ensuite 
drab, cheerless places to pass or to|/would be the best method, sowing the yield per acre at 678 pounds as , with private bath 
visit, especially during the dormant | ceeds in the fall or planting seedlings compared with 65S pounds for th Because the 1988 wheat cron in Fi 


issued, the 1938 potato crop in Canada 


|provement is soon noted in the seed 


IOPG-B7 crop The total yield is there- Rates from $1.00 per dey 


season. A few good animals are like|or seed in spring? Would the hedge eat tea catund abodes 
so many pets to enliven the scene/need any support or would it grow fore placed at 10,780,000 tons, an in-]joree that it cannot be absorbed b sient’ Wntuiihes 5 Sees 

and maintain the interest. thick enough to support itself? Does crease on the previous year of 1,028,000 | eee eee ena Minnlah Gos Specia a fond Monts 

J A he honeysuckle grow quickly or can you tone ment has passed a law controlling t anes 
To find what one can grow and/recommend anything better ? (not — maha hah ana tinue toda, with the aie OE decane eal 

grow it; what one can sell and sell it;}caragana). I need it as a windbreak A bottle of water, standing outside ]of encouraging home consumption Bag) 27 yy ang 

what one can buy and do without it—j|and also as a screen from the road, a California house in 1981, focused the - — W. W. G. McALLISTER 

that way lies thrift and success. It}so want it fairly thick. Would one un's rays with such intensity that the Wales has banned th scieiner 36 Manager 

is possible, of course, to be penny-/row be enough or would it _ need wooden wall was ignited notices on trees, — , 


wise and pound-foolish. Self-denial 
can be carried further than is wise, 
but the common tendency is to stop 
short of exploring its possibilities. 

a se * 


fairly well ma- 


Hibernal apples, 
and further 


tured on the _ trees 


OT 


»( ated Ol 


THE L 


EL 


It Is Your Elevator 


more?—(Mrs.) W.G., Teepee Creek, 
Alta. 

Ans.: Though conceding the right 
to preferences, we do not agree with 
the choice of honeysuckle as a hedge 
vey It is a medium-rapid grower 

ut tends in time to become ragged 


EL 


, /Ol 


( Street 


AND 


fotel 


1O4ath A 


of th 


The original 


Is picture Is a transparency In natural color, made with 


an inexpensive miniature camera. Good in black-and-white, it glows with 


life in 


NDOUBTEDLY most Snapshot 

Guild members have longed to 
own a miniature camera. There’s 
fascination in these beautiful little 
instruments, with their fast lenses, 
quick shutters, easy focusing, con- 
venient size and instant readiness 
for action, They are cameras one 
can keep at hand all the time, ready 
for a picture chance the moment it 
appears. 

But, in comparison to inexpensive 
box and folding cameras, prices of 
the de luxe miniatures have been a 
bit too steep for many of us. True 
value for every penny—but too 
-many pennies, So, I think, most of us 
will welcome the arrival of the true 


color. 


Many invariably refer to a minta- 
ture as a “candid” camera, and ap- 
parently believe that it automati- 
cally gets unusual, unposed snap- 
shots. That isn’t true—any camera 
can catch unposed, “off-guard” 
snaps, under suitable light condi- 
tions, But the miniature’s small size, 
fast lens, and quick action make it 
easier to get “offguard” or “candid” 
shots. And its convenience is an 
aid in all kinds of snapshooting. 
The miniature is so easy to handle 
and operate that you want to take 
more pictures. The more pictures 
you shoot, the more practice you 
get—and your pictures just natu- 
rally begin to improve. 


COMING TO EDMONTON? 


\2<e ewwwww we wm www ow www ww ewe - ew we we ww ow wo oe oe oe ww - -- -- oe wm oe + eee ~- ee wwe eee - + 


The 


King Edward Hotel 


Offers Service and Accommodation 


miniatures in the moderate price 
range which have recently been an- 
nounced. 

The other day, I saw a beautifully 
made miniature, with a sharp-cut- 
ting £.6.6 lens, for only $17.60—a 
camera capable of taking black-and- 
white pictures under adverse light 
conditions as well as color film to 
obtain gorgeous transparencies for 
projection, A similar camera, but 
with a faster lens, was priced at 
$29. Both were sturdy, well-built, 
and capable of doing excellent work. 
These are about bottom prrece for 
miniatures capable of taking good | Yu will like the results, 
color pictures, 207 John van Guilder. 
ED 


One great virtue of a miniature 
camera with a good color-corrected 
lens is that you can use natural 
color film as easily as black-and- 
white. The original of the picture 
above, a full-color transparency, 
shows the little girl's cheeks, rosy- 
pink, hair sparkling gold against a 
bright blue sky. Quite a difference 
from black-and-white, and a new 
thrill for the picture-taker. You can 
get this natural color film for minta- 
ture cameras in 36mm, and No, 828 
sizes, Try some shots with color film, 


You do not need to be a shareholder of 
the Company to think of the United 
Grain Growers Elevator as your ele- 
vator. It was built by a Farmers 
Company for the use of farmers, and 
the successful record of the Company 
has been made possible by the con- 
tinued patronage of many thousand 
farmers. 


DELIVER YOUR GRAIN TO 


UNITED GRAIN GROWERS 


Elevators at: Grande Prairie, Sexsmith, Clairmont, Wembicy, Dimadcle, 
Reaver Lodge, BRelloy, Dawson Creck, Huallen, Hythe, 
Pouce Coupe, Prestville, Rycroft, Wanham. 


that pleases 
° 


RATES FROM ONE DOLLAR AND A HALF 


PAGE FOUR 


Interesting 


No. 20 By R. A. MACLEOD 


SEXSMITH MILLING CO. 
INSTALLS 35 H.P. ENGINE 


The Sexsmith Milling Company, 
owned by Messrs. C. H. Warren & 


10:30, which left the 


Sons, have just installed a 35- Né5s- : 
horsepower Case stationary engine light service has been 
to take the place of their old steamer, Sepenaeate, 


which they have been using for a 
number of years now. 

In conversation with Lee Warren, 
he stated that he figured that they 
would save approximately $150 a 
month on their power on account of 
installing this new i 

The mill is now running 24 hours 
a day and has a capacity of 50 bar- 
rels. This is the second Case engine 
Mr. Warren has purchased. 


SELLS ROBIN HOOD FLOUR 
BUT IS NOT ROBIN HOOD 


hooligans if they are 


and the Royal Bank 
with a sign, “Social C 


DELIGHTFUL HALL 


The United Church 
Society enjoyed a 
Hallowe'en party on 
One fine morning last week an October 21. 
agent of the Robin Hood Flour Com- 
pany. who incidentally lives in 
Grande Prairie, was travelling along 
a road just west of Sexsmith, near 
the estate of Mr. Garfield Walters. 
when he espied a partridge sitting on 
top of a fence. 

Being a thrifty soul, he thought 
that a little wild meat would help! 
out the family budget, and getting 
out his trusty gun, he took careful 
aim and let fly. To his surprise, he 
saw that the bird was still sitting on 
the fence, apparently uninjured. 
Taking another bead, he fired again. 
and this time the bird, evidently = 
seared to death, dropped to the nected with the 
ground and was easily captured. magazine literature. 

Someone remarked that if this 
nimrod would emulate the man for 
whom _ this 
named, one-time buddy of Richard I. 
and got a bow and arrow, he might 
be more successful as a marksman. 


Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Fairbairn and 
family, who have been in Edmonton 
for the past week on a combined 
business and pleasure trip, returned 
home by car last Friday. 


and social 
quite evident to all 
done a lot of work in 


appropriately decorat 
lowe’en colors. 

The literary section 
was in charge of Mr. 
led a discussion on 


For Me?” 


reading and the social 
paper, entitled the 


a good selection of 


town lights went off. 
'group filled in with 
jsongs until candles 


i 


CURLING CLUB AND ATHLETIC 


CLUB UNITE DRILLING we ce @2 old witch, carrying 


broom, 


At a meeting held a few weeks ago scene and told everyo 


News From Sexsmith 


November 1, 1938 


ferentiate between good clean fun 
and making a general nuisance of 
themselves, went a little too far and 
cut off the light somewhere around 


This was rather serious, as the 


consequently very few 
were supplied with other 
forms of lighting. We understand 
the police are looking into this, and 
it will be just too bad for these 


Some windows were marked up, 


PARTY ENJOYED BY Y.P.S. 


very delightful 


The program for the 
evening was in charge of the literary 
convenors and 


the evening. The tables in the room 
and the delightful refreshments were 


“What Can Magazine Reading Do 
The group entered very 
well into the discussion that followed 
the paper, on the merits of magazine 


various types of 


Norman Foster, editor of the Y.P.S. 
“Wonder,” 
well-known flour is the first edition, and read a very fine 
editorial as the opening page. 

The social committee had arranged 


were in progress when, as the result 
of some Hallowe'en pranksters, the 


when the party went on in true Hal- 
lowe’en style by the eery light of dim 
candles. Mrs. Pat Graham, attired as 


and leaning heavily on her witches 
suddenly appeared on the 


;: PEORIA NEWS H 
--@ 


PEORIA, Nov. 
stock last shipping day. 


ton to his home at 


i : : as far as Edmonton. 
town in dark- went with him es far | 


of the best and 


out to the oil fields at Pou 
last Sunday to have a look 
oo * _ 


church school in honor of Mr. Wil 


apprehended. 


was p Medicine Hat with his bride. He lef 


redit House.” 


OwWE’EN law's farm. 


Young Peoples ‘iP %© Grande Prairie today. 
Some snow fell night before last 
This is our first snow this fall. 
os es oe 


the night of 


it was Mr. and Mrs. John noes are 
lanning on making their home at 
that they had elowns, B.C. We wish them a 


preparation for pleasant journey. id 
Mr. 


ed with Hal- week by motor car. 


of the program 
Brubaker, who 
the question, 


on leaving today for Stettler, Alberta 


wheat with his truck. 


@oe 


Gordondale At 
Last Has Good 
Standard Road 


GORDONDALE 


oce 


problems con- 


gave 


games, which 


Some of the 
readings and 
were secured, 
than in name only. 
plishment that any 
proud of — wide crown with 
elevation and well 
deep ditches each side. 


a shaky candle 


ne’s fortune. 


Dan, Fred and Pete Reiswig, Mr. 
Ziprick and’ Mr. Rottacker motored 


ce a 
A gathering was held in the Peoria | 
Ganz, who recently returned from 


next day for the Hat, where he has 
the job of managing his father-in- 


Mr. Rottacker is making a business 


Alfred Rogers returned last 
He returned to 
sell out his business. He is planning 


Mr. Dan Reiswig is busy hauling 


GORDONDALE, Oct. 27.—At long 
last we have a road to within two 
miles of the post office—and more 
It is an accom- 
man might be 
good 
drained by the 
Mr. S. Boyn- 
ton was in charge of the outfit and 
it does not need much intelligence to 


! SCENIC HEIGHTS 


ATTRACTS LARGE CROWD 
Despite the numerous dances 


the Hallowe'en rovelt 


THE NORTHERN TRIBUNE 


1—Mr. George G. HALLOWE’EN NOVELTY DANCE 
Reiswi shipped three carloads of 
— ri He is also 
continuing on his way from Edmon- 
Kelowna, B.C. 
Irving Reiswig and Gust Wagman 


being . 
stagec round and about the country- Community Club— 
side, a splendid crowd turned out to Officers are: Presi 
y dance here at) 


Scenic Heights on Friday evening. 


the proper 


} from tiring so quickly. 
A four-piece orchestra 
t 


their toes 


throughout 
evening. 


dance. 
those 
dance number. 


two vocal solos, 
well received. 
Mr. 


which were 


Four Today,” which broug 
of laughter from the crowd. 

Step-dances 
gentlemen who refused 
their name. Mr. 


the lunch iatermission. 


The ladies’ choice balloon novelty 
dance proved to be one of the eve- 
nings highlights. Miss Edna Stokke 
prize- winner. 

Other novelties included the elim- 
ination dance, which was won by 
Miss Barbara Dool and Mr. Sam Mc- 


of Wembley was the 


Keeman, both of Scenic Heights. 
Olaf Foss of Meadowville. 
Vivian Forester and Mr. 


burn respectively. 


ment. 


The hall, which was fittingly déc- | 
orated with witches, black cats, owls, 22d 
jack-o’-lanterns and balloons, created 
Hallowe'en atmosphere. 
The floor, too, was in excellent con-_ 
dition, which prevented the dancers 


from 
Grande Prairie, led by Mr. N. Green- 
wood, provided a peppy variety of 
dance music, keeping the crowd on. 
the entire 


During the lunch intermission the 
committee had arranged with Miss 
Marie Trelle and Beryl Purves, two 
popular Wembley girls, to do a tap- | 

girls delighted all 
present with a double tap- 


Miss Elizabeth Clark then rendered 
very 
(Jock) Thompson was then 
called upon for a Scotch song, which 
he gave in his own inimitable style. 
For an encore Mr. Thompson offered 
a comic song, entitled “I’m Ninety- 
ht bursts/a season so continuously perfect. 


were given by two | 
to divulge 
Jack Brown of 
Canuck also gave a clever step-dance 
to conclude the entertainment during 


The broom dance was won by Mr. | 


The spot dance was won by Miss 
Herman 
Wiebe, of Scenic Heights and Lym- 


Besides the other novelties men- | 
tioned, there was a moonlight waltz, 
which added to the evenings enjoy- 


Playing for the first time at Scenic 


H ASPEN RIDGE ; 
O ow ow ww wo wo ew www ww ee oO 
COMMUNITY CLUB FORMED 
ASPEN yg Nov. 1. — The 
‘Aspen Ridge istrict formed their} 
last Wednesday. | 
dent, Mrs. Harry 


Grande Prairie 
November 13 


The Rev. 


'secretary, Mr. Green. Missionary Society of the 


dance on Thursday, November Church (Anglican) on 
10. Good music, a good floor and a ning, Nov 


bring box 
78 eon ‘Cathedral School, University Coll 
Dick Richardson has been forced to|and Wycliffe College, Toronto. 


tion. | 
recovery. | 
_ 


Harry Broadhurst has left 


he will soon be homesick. 


itwo 


ith headquarters in Calcutta. 


lw 
On the outbreak of the war 


}1915 he 
jpioneer the 


ASPEN GLEN AUTO CAMP, Nov. wens 


1.—Though traffice is dwindling, it 


standing the truck ban (limiting the and Mesopotamia he served 


extent of the load) the Peace River | 


| Highway in this area has never had forces. 


dispatches and awarded the O.B.E. 


Following are those who camped 
or called at Aspen Glen: 
John, Edna and Ole Soderquist of 
|LaGlace and Valleyview. 
| W. F. Hoppe, Fairview. 
| Miss Nan, Miss Billie and Hugh 
‘Gillis of Sexsmith, with Romeo 
|Pronovost. One or more of the num- 
j}ber was or were being taken to at- 
tend Agricultural School at Ver- 
milion. 
. C. Howerton and wife, Peace 
River subscription agent for local 


| 


fax last year 


this year Mr. Dixon was 
ously appointed to fill the office. 


per. 

Earl Wise, Brownvale. 

John K. Dewar and Mrs. Dewar of 
Beaver Lodge stopped for gasoline 
{both going and coming to and from 
|visiting her folks, the Idhes of 
Kinuso. 

A truckload of people of River- 
jhurst, Sask., returning from looking 
jover the country west of Peace River 
jtown: Archie, Arthur, Thomas, Ruby, 


| ber 11 to Tuesday, November 15 


Monday, November 14. 


Special Visitor In 


Leonard Dixon, M.A., 
Johnson; vice-president, Joe Jensen;|O.B.E.. the Field Secretary of the 


Canadian 
This club is sponsoring a box social Church, is to be a visitor to Christ 


Sunday eve- 
ember 13 * o'clock. 
: - Mg : Born in Toronto, Mr. Dixon re- 
Sans tone. nee Pionee lived bas chusplion ot &t. Aieere| = 


go to Edmonton for a serious opera- 1912 ' — to — to take up 
Good luck, Di and as _special work among the young men 
ony of the Ancient Syrian Church, under . 
the Y.M.C.A., acting as their District |2 new reserv 
the Secretary in the Native States of | 
country indefinitely, but we expect Travancore and Cochin till 1931, with | 
the exception of the war years, and | 
years as Associate National | 
Secretary of the Y.M.C.A. in India, | 


in 1914 
he went to North India for wor 

among the English Territorials. In the dance at Good 
to Mesopotamia to) 
Y.M.C.A. work among! 
|the British and Indian troops there, 


still continues. The continuously | , ; . | 
" >. 'and remained in charge of the work | 
good state of the road remains, as it tll the spring of 1919. Both in India | 


in an 
honorary capacity as Chaplain to the 


He was mentioned three times in| 


He returned to Canada in 1931 at 
the request of the Student Christian 
|Movement in the University of Tor- 
onto to become its General Secretary 
and continued as such until his ap- 
pointment to Orillia in January, 1935. 

At the General Synod held in Hali- 
it was decided to 
appoint a field secretary and at a 
further meeting held in Toronto of 


He is visiting the Diocese of Atha- 
basca and will be in the Deanery of 
Grande Prairie from Friday, Novem- 


It is hoped that Mr. Dixon will be 
able to meet the parishioners at a | 
social gathering in Speke Hall on 


SEVERAL LUTHERAN CHURCHES | 
DEDICATED IN P.R. RECENTLY Derry and Lou Kenneth have 


THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1988 


> 


where? We complain many 

things, but not of the grand autumn 

days we are enjoying this year. 
Road work has been the order of 


ithe an our ae, has nom 
‘a very busy man ey attending 
| details of same. Di are being 


i The Norton boys made a fine 
iof the latter. Anyway, one 
buy an aeroplane now to reach 


dug where needed and fea tine Job 
"t 


Freddie ee is at present digging 


Earle McLaughlin is helping out at 
en's. 


Ted Neilis has a position at David 
er’s. 
oe = 2 


A carload of young people took in 
win Friday night. 
- & . 


Velva Regnier spent the week-end 
|with Mary Hunter. r 
_ s 


Vernon Patterson is employed 
‘digging a well at the Harle home 
near Grande Prairie. | 


The dance and slipper social held 
|October 28 in aid of Bezanson Christ 
mas treat for the children was a 
decided success from a_ financial 
standpoint, for around $30 was taken 
in. The lovely comforter which was 
raffled off was won by Glen Ames. 
Some of the girls have designs for 
still winning that rose and gold quilt, 
Glen, so you'd better watch out. 
es 


We hear reports otf more weddings 
to come in our district. Let’s hope 
this is not an epidemic. 

- 6 - 


Craig Moon arrived this week with 
}a truckload of potatoes and returned 
he Edmonton Saturday morning. 


: GOODWIN : 


@-------- 


GOODWIN, Oct. 31.— Mrs. Cal- 
re- 


| 


}turned home after spending the 


Past 
Rev. Iver Iverson of Saskatoon ‘week in the Bezanson district visit- 


> sonia : ‘ ; “Lucille, Miss Elsie, Miss Gladys i ; 

a feel ay Oe rae BB The well decorated lunch was en- see that he fully understands his Heights, Mr. Greenwood and his |tucker. tivo babies (nine Tuckers). was a passenger on Tuesday’s train, ims friends. ; ee 

aa. aa sided 66 snes resources ond joyed by all and the evening was work. _ ; ’ ; - four-piece orchestra made a decided | ith Victor and Delmer Olson of;en route home from the Block, where Mr dM A. Goodland 

tg gn ty Rhy nny MA ; voted a real success. A ball will roll downhill with its hit with the crowd and are leoking|Gijroy. Sask.. and Geo. H. Whicker lhe dedicated Lutheran churches at Mr. and rs. A. and are 
stk a well to serve both the skating ““. own momentum if started right and forward to future engagements here. |¢; Riverhurst. Dawson Creek and Montenay. getting things straightened out to 
and vp Bi, oo 7 wes SEXSMITH UNITED CHURCH quite a few stabs have been made, The Athletic Club wish to thank] y xfcGrath and family of Drum-| Previously he dedicated a church ™ove on the Allen Moore place. 
startes | yester » 4 and up 2 ~~ _., Minister: around working off back taxes. No all who supported the dance at/nejer stopped for gasoline on theirjin the LaGlace district, and also a . 
Meguitty ay cahdedied hed if he REV. E RANDS. B.A job of any account finished to @ate Scenic Heights and particularly the way to visit at Clairmont, from|church west of Valhalla Centre. A bunch of the Goodwin merry- 


successful as he has been in the 
two wells he drilled, we may 
for a flowing well. 


is as 
last 


look 


11:00 a.m.—Teepee C 
and Sund 


ROCKEY ENTHUSIASTS 


7:30 p.m.—Sexsmith 
SEE N. Y. TEAMS PLAY 


choir will 


From all accounts the Rangers are | 


| 
| 


a team of Stanley Cup calibre. 


K. 


HALLOWE'EN PROVED HECTIC 
NIGHT AT SEXSMITH TOWN 


11:15 am.—Norwegian 


Hallowe'en was a very hectic night 
Sexsmith. The small kiddies cer- 


1:00 p.m.—Lutheran 
cast from 


in 


tainly reaped a harvest in apples, 
peanuts and candy. Very few out. | 8:00 ME ws +3 
houses were knocked over. Several; ~ pom smith 


cars slipped their moorings and 
drifted out into the stream, notice- 
ably Jim McDonald’s Super Rolls- 
Royce. which wandered all over 
town, but was finally rescued and 


by 
League. 


| BADMINTON CLU 


BELLOY, Oct. 


Ripley; vice-president. 


If that cold has caused throat or 


ing com/‘orting relief—where you 
Want it—when you want it. Next, 


melt a*spoonful of VapoRub in a FAILED vO wire 
bowl of boiling water. Then breathe A_party of young peo 
in the steaming medicated vapors to Rycroft last Friday 


for a few minutes. As these Vapors 
work their way down through the 
irritated air-passages, they loosen 
the phlegm and ease the cough. 
The relief that 
VapoRub 


there 
time, but failed 
adio given away t 


—Even in Circulation Claims Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ri 


arm homes in Grande Prairie 
a.strict were subscribers to The 
Tribune than to any other loca! 
proper, proving that it pays to 


According to 


grunts 


feel the painting of th 


Sunday, November 6 


11:00 a.m.—Sexsmith Sunday School. 
3:30 p.m.—Morningview 


LUTHERAN CHURCH 
A. KNUTSON, Pastor 
Sunday. November 6 


Service, Sexsmith. 


3:00 p.m.—Grande Prairie—H. C. 


Program given 
Northfield 


LUTHERAN HOUR 


Oe eww ne we ee 


ANNUAL MEETING 


31.—The 
|Badminton Club held 
meeting last Sunday afternoon and 
organized for the coming season. 
Officers elected: President, 


Slettedohl were entertained at bridge 
at the Stauffer home Sunday evening. 


tell us how far it is to Eaglesham. 


emitted by Ross the other day, we 


after a while if this weather holds. 
e eo a 


reek Service 
ay School. 


Service. morrow night at H. Kirkness’ for Mr. 
Service. The and Mrs. K. Johnstone, who are re- 
sing. moving to Milestone, where they will | 


day, mostly his own. Some good 
»... Prices were realized although he 

and English struck a glutted market. 
po Broad- Mr. M. Kolosky is constructing a 


assistance of Mr. H. Gold. 
eo eo a 
Sex- 


A heavy shower fell last night but 
the effects have disappeared already 
in the gale we are getting today. 

eee 


GROUND FIRES STILL BURNING 


League. 
Luther 


i i ; The first Sunday of every month One or two puffs of smoke can be 
A. piloted it safely beck to the from 1 to 2 pm. over CFGP. These seen once in a while from the ground 
. " yroadcas > s 0 dad by free will s stil urt , bU 
ther reports were not so good. - me mn Rinaiy send’ your eit pe yh ge heavy Sos 
Some boys, reaching the age of man-/io Mr. GR. Johnson. La Glace. late keep things somewhat damp 
hood, broke into the school and alberta. since th w. The patrols are still 
damaged some of the desks and scat- Bee sae GROW. y pa hed tir 
tered papers all over the room. ee See ? i. lected "fo r The ‘tecke of tim ber 
" ™ s y is 100K ior. 
Others, who were old enough to dif- | } BELLOY NEWS { are limited that have not burned, so 


they will not have so much territory 
to cover and can watch that which is 


6B HOLDS left far easier. 


Belloy 
it. annual 


| HYTHE NEWS | 


Oo as 


HYTHE, Nov. 1.—The fowl] supper 
held at the United Church on Mon- 


Wm. 
Earl Stauffer; 


secretary-treasurer, Mary Kostash. day night was well attended. 
Arrangements were made to put » 
on a few tournaments and Mary Mr. Gust Nepstad, who has been 
Rouleau and Allan Archibald were spending the summer at Valhalla 
elected to arrange and manage same. Centre, left for his home in Van- 
(DUE 70 COLDS) With a couple of weeks’ practice couver last Saturday. 
jthe Belloy Badminton Club will be ae ae ae 


~ - ready for action against the best of Miss Laura Brown of Sexsmith 
funy of Vike Cone } Rs }them. Tournaments for local mem- s been visiting friends in town for 
tongue and let it melt. Peel bers will be held periodically to en- the past few days. 
VapoRub’s medication bathe the able the committee to choose the a Ea 
irritated membranes as it slowly strongest players for outside tourna- The Hythe Gospel Mission is erect- 
trickles down your throat—bring- ments. 1g 2 new mission at the north end of 


expect to have it com- 


the next two 


RADIO 
ple journeyed 
night to 


WeCKsS. 


at- 


HYTHE GOSPEL MISSION 


All reported Friday, 8 p.m.— Young People’s 
to bring home meeting. 
© lucky ticket Sunday — HYTHE — Sunday School 
2 p-m.; Service, 3 p.m 


ALBRIGHT HALL, 7:30 p.m. 


brings will dee YicKs purchased last Everybody welcome to these 
ht you. VapoRus Iduc and Mr. J. vices. 
school teacher. — 
=i “ ° THE UNITED CHURCH 
3 inion } returned home Hythe 
ri Orn. 1 a three weeks’ REV H. STARK. Minister 
fac with her daughter at Slave Sunday, November 6 
_"— ae Sah Albright Hall 11:30 a.m. 
emmitt ; mn. 
O hes Mr. Ripley of the John Deere Plow ethe ae 94 aoe 
Company is a business visitor in the % 
district this week. Qn = =o 
ES STILL THE | uc. and Mrs: W.H. Wortman were} }  BEAVERLODGE | 
week-end visitors at Watino. ee | 
BEST POLICY eek-e isitors at Watino *----— 


RADIO PLAY WAS ENJOYED 
BEAVER LODGE, Nov. 1.— The 
radio play is over and according to 


pley and Mr. 


During its recent subscrip- reports it was enjoyed to a great 
tien survey members of The POPS BY “POP” extent by those listening in. 
Tribune staff learned that more We are wondering if Emil could) At the Sunday meeting of the 


Dramatic Club the cast for another 
radio play, “Aunt Tilley Goes To 
Town,” was chosen. The play was 
read by those who will participate, 


and groans 


e badminton 


worth commenting upon, but may be 


A farewell dance is being held to- 


assist the former’s parents in farming | 


Mr. C. Keyser conveyed a carload 
cattle to Edmonton last shipping 


intermission; also the 
committee, whose 
mendable, not forgetting the 


tasty dance lunch. 


pleased with the entire course. 


' FAUST NEWS 


— 


artistes who entertained during the 
decoration 
work was com- 
local 
ladies who provided, once again, a 


' 


Death Takes Little 


new house on his homestead with the 


Robert Menzies 


FAUST, Oct. 


school 
appendicitis. 


in Faust’s 


tacked by He 


sot. ne See we Fm y ropa not chairman, and Major L. R. Lipset, POR “SRINGING uP BAsY” 
articularly shocki to aust O.B.E.. of Ardley, Alberta, an au-| 
school children was this sudden | The skeleton of a huge prehistoric 


death of one of their number. 


Friday to 


for the funeral. 


31.—Robert Menzies, 
10, was as lively as any other student 
til suddenly at- 
was 
rushed to Edmonton, but it was too 


They 
individually contributed to the pur- 
'chase of flowers for his casket. And 
'the primary room was dismissed on 
permit Miss Halwa to 
motor with others of Faust to the city 


The last recollection the writer has 


of Robert is 


he called at his home. 


when with his mother 
With glad- 


some glee Robert raced to the berry 
patch for a handful of fruit. How 
glorious, he thought, to be young, 
carefree and live in happy abandon! 
But who would have guessed that 
that scene and those thoughts were 
being fixed in the mind as the last 


memory of him! 
Sad enough 


when old folks pass 


on, but for a youth whose life and 


usefulness is ahead of him it is 
pathetic. 
e-- @ 
{ MOUNTAIN TRAIL NEWS } 
° ° 


MOUNTAIN TRAIL, Nov. 1.—Miss 


Opal Johnston 


Halliday, due to the latter’s illness. 
7” * _ 


I. Fawkes was a 


River Sunday. 
— 


w 


DANCE WENT OVER BIG 


The dance at the school Friday | 
proved a huge success. Everyone 
had a good time and, financially 
peakin Z evening was very suc- 
€ socks which were raf- 


fled were won by O. Hegland. 
sum of $17 was cleared, part of whic 


working for Mrs. 


visitor at Spirit! 


The 


h 


is being donated to the church and 
part toward the Christmas tree fund. 


We thank all the loyal supporters. 


SEEN AND HEARD 
Lloyd putting 
in the ditch. 


Jim El. found the grader on Friday | 


night. Oh! Oh! 
We wonder 
box he bought. 
How did Cecil 
rose he bought Friday night. 


Jim and Stacy buying dolls. Gone 


back to your childhood days, boys? 


Opal and Dommer 


how Dave knew the 


know the white 


j 
} 
j 


Jim Evans still recovering Sunday 


after the big night Friday. 


A pie social is rumored. Oh boy! 
That's all. 


mt news instead of *plu court should be perfect. and even the first time was just one wee eee ee -9% 
pos ertising. ™ ‘ _— We'll bet George G. and Alfred B. continual laugh. What about it H SPIRIT RI YER NEWS H 
3 6 wes. aleo learned that had a hard trip to Spirit River last when it is acted out. Watch for the are 
- he cee hursday ni . k ? : 
broadcasting “hot air” claims RT nat wenel” te tee ha joe Pe ane rent ae SPIRIT RIVER UNITED CHURCH 
seeeraene Siler tks tee, | and Evangelist? Oh, ves, one or two. | BENTUM UNITED CHURCH Rev. H. B. RICKER, B.A. BD 
sion on Peace River farmers— | 7%8nks- . Beaver lodge Sunday, November 6 
apparently they're “from Mis- | ,,,@Uestion: Why do the people of the REV. GEO. A. SHIELDS, B.A Broncho Creek 11:45 a.m 
souri” and have to be “shown.” | W#tino, Eaglesham, Codesa, .Belloy, Minister Spirit Valley 3:00 p.m 
Hath week The Trihune shows | Peoria and W anham districts have to Sean " ie Spirit River 730 p.m. 
it has “the goods.” shake and shimmy over the muni- | _ Sunday, November ‘ ete? AE 
: : } cipality road rem Wanhz.m te By. 11:00 a.m.—Beaver Lodge SS. es ? 
* Advertisin ut in to fill space croft one whole seasym without/ 11:00 aim.—Elmworth. TRIBUNE WANT ADS ’ 
&p lencountering one mile of road that od 3:00 p.m.—Appleton. Be RRING RESULT? ‘ 
idragged or drugged? 7:30 pm.—Beaver Lodge. Geren n+ ~- 22 enn 8 


| 
| 


| 
| 
| 


rh th ved eight ye ago. 
ee ee ae AUSTRALIAN MILK OUTPUT 


the manufacture of butter: 
Sunday, November 6 s 


You are invited to be with us. Thurs., Fri., Sat., Nov. 3, 4, 5— 


PROBE ALBERTA 
GASOLINE PRICES 


Investigation of gasoline prices in 
Alberta by a royal commission ap- 
pointed by the provirmcial government ’ 
has been delayed for a month in| Simon. 
order that departmental officials will | Thurs., Fri., Sat., Nov. 10, 11, 12— 
have full opportunity to make cer-/| 
tain inquiries concerning oil firms’ | 
operations, including marketing costs 
and such like. 

The commission is composed of Mr. 
Justice McGillivray of Calgary. 


Kelly as Tom Sawyer. 
NEXT WEEK: 
Mon., Tues., Wed., Nov. 7, 8, 9— 


Katharine 
Grant. 


Hepburn and 


GIANT SKELETON CREATED 


thority on marketing problems. Chief 
counsel for the commission is J. J. 
Frawley, K.C.. while the chief ac- 
countant adviser to the co ion 
is F. G. Cottle, C.A.. member of the 
provincial gas conservation board. 

Keen interest is expected to be 
shown when the commission resumes 
its sittings, as it is given wide scope 
‘for investigation into the spread be- 
tween wholesale and retail gasoline 
prices. In addition to lookimg into 
various aspects of fuel oil marketing 
in this province, the commission also 
is to recommend what should be the 
price for gasoline in this province. 
It is also to report on the desirability 
of the province taking over control 
of distribution for marketing pur- 
poses. 

Over a period of several years the 
Alberta Motor Association has ex- 
pressed protests over gasoline prices 
in Alberta and called for « complete 
inquiry. 

In view of gasoline price reduction 
ordered by the fuel commissioner in 
British Columbia recently, a cut of 
three cents per gallon being ordered, 


monster, 


'saurus Excelsis 


an accurate reproduction 


|Museum at Yale University. 


still man, 
considerable 


several 
correspondence 


craftsmen. 


a zoology professor. 


course. It is, instead, a 


54.000,000 


eee & RI gallons (4.9 per cent) in the manufac: | 
Talk about your hockey enthu- SEXSMITH AND DISTRICT operations. We are pol nt that Mr. 11 a-m.—Wembley Sunday School. ture ot choses. sopeenses 996 pews. 
ste > @ e - ae edhe —_. ° J 
gloat, =P neve some in we . ANGLICAN SERVICES t : U. Powell has been on the sick list 1 a.m.—Dimsdale Church Service. pa A vb gB. yy Me Bm mace 
: ast Ap ay a. Fred y ao REV. HH. EB WEBB. Rector. Mrs. D. Menzies Was out to see a ¢.) the past few days. We trust, 12 noon—Dimsd ale Sunday School. gg tea consumption er other pur- 
so. Govree Seaeren an —_ ad Sunday, November 6 Goats feat, week, pg ene Bye es however, that his condition will be 3 emeatig  ahi Lodge Church eesee. 
are, ae — Sarr 3 ~engoen 11:00 a.m.—St. , en s, North Sex- is the right kind of news to hear. moves ae meer: who has just 7:30 p.m.—Wembley Church Serv- 
Americans, which resulted in a win| 3:00 p.m —St. John’s Church, Buf- The local S. C. boys held their Gompleted a six weeks course in WMS Lantern slides ene cTearRPi teu ¥ 
for the Rangers, 5 to 3. Mr. Frank /| falo Lake. annual meeting on Saturday last at diesel engineering co me titled “Cameos of Korea,” 
Newman of the Sexsmith district} 730 p-m.—Emmanuel Church, Sex- fit SSidenee of Nels Rydland. turned hese Sat ig a Ba a will be shown at this THIS WEEK: 
was also a spectator at this game. smith. . 8 oSerees . vow "service. ’ 


“The Adventures of Tom Sawyer,” 
in Technicolor, introducing Tommy 


“Love And Hisses,”’ starring Walter 
Winchell, Ben Bernie and Simone 


“Bringing Up Baby,” co-starring 
Cary 


known to science as the 
“Giant Sauropod Dinosaur Bronto- 
.” plays an important 
part in the new RKO Radio picture, | 
“Bringing Up Baby,” which co-stars | 
| Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant. 
The skeleton seen in the picture is | 
of an 
authentic original which was rebuilt. 
from fossil remains for the Peabody | 


Research entailed in getting exact 
| dimensions included a set of pictures 
taken for the purpose by the studio 
interviews and 
with 
Professor Richard Swann Lull of the 
Peabody Museum, and a formidable 
pile of drawings and charts to be 
used as work sheets by the studio 


The reason for all this ado is that, 
in the picture, Cary Grant portrays 
The picture, 
however, is not a deep scientific dis- 
riotous 
comedy, made doubly amusing by 
the change which comes over Grant 


special interest is bei hown in the “hen he falls under the Hepburn 
a my oilan toe o <a sae spell and deserts his work and 
” be eat Ae eel ed th fiancee to embark on a series of 


amazing uwdven . 
SKINS OF RATS AND MICE TOSSES SSventaree 


ARE OF VALUE TO JAPAN 


if and Saturday, November 10, 11 
Flat rdinarily thought and 12. 
fin Jat where. as unmiti - ine nein’ eT 
gated pests ‘AMERICANESE ISN'T AS 
B t in th peri 1. = en: Sig - EASY AS PLAIN ENGLISH 
every de. thi : = saareanse A he Having mastered English in a little 
pene, Poset shes , «| Rere than a year so that she.can 
etnies seisttie., 06 ried, can be| Tattle it off like a native, Simone 
Seman 4am tned. an aed | for knap- Simon is plowing into American 
sacks. brief cases. lining vf slang— with hilarious effects. She 
cats and othe i which are finds it takes a certain “Je Ne Sais 
#u made out eof more valuab.c Quoi.” 
materials “You're clicki big” i 
The market for dead cat= and dogs king ig fs one of the 


f the value 


is r the 
f their skins 
The pr various animals 
reported a fol Five to seven 
yen ($1750 to $2) for a doe, one yen 
for a cat, ten sen for a rat. and five 
n for a mouse 


rising SArmne reason, 


her latest film, “Love and Hisses,” 


day and Wednesday. 


NEW ARCHITECTURE WILL BE j 
SEEN AT THE WORLD'S FAIR 


and Ben Bernie. 


expression off 
Simone almost 


the set, 
invariably gets 


‘slang expressions that she uses in 


Twentieth Century-Fox hit at the 
Capitol Theatre next Monday, Tues- 
Cast for the 
first time in a singing comedy role, 
_ Simone co-stars with Walter Winchell 


When she wants to use the same 
however, 
it 


“Bringing Up Baby” will be at the 
Capitol Theatre on Thursday, Friday 


j 
| 
| 
/ 
| 
J 
i 


A preview of the etyle of architee- twisted. “You've got the big clicks‘” 
| ture to be exemplified in the New York she will say in her pert, saucy man- 
| World’« Falr is provided by the lavish ner. 

new metropolitan night club. the Rivi “Skip it” is another of her phrases 
era. Evers intertot wer saves on a for “Love and Hisses,” in which she 
arc ‘ving euc room an husion of ’ i 

ereatir = ape go ann main 4 one Bg Ey trying to learn 
room, a huge oval o ¥ ) equare fee . . 

belies the canine apr arene * of the “Just Jump over it,” she said to | 
huilding’s exterior Director Sidney Lanfield one day. | 

Other “features of the future” are a “You know, hop it.” That stopped 

disappearing G2-ton roof. « reeeding production for five minutes while | 
stave, a revolving sta with colore’ Lanfield insisted that she speak her 
floor ents « revolving bandstand for own carefully chosen English words | 
rade 2 oe, aos cegdt are ys A/“*) rather than slang. 
ewitch and of n the huge dining room By the time I finish “Love ane | 


to the 


Sindaem Mives's trbenen Hisses” I will know slang,” she de- 


mae |clared. “I have to know it so I can 
An excellent lubricant for squeaking |talk to the people on this set. It's 
doors and other parts of a car is a/jlike learning a new foreign lan- 


common WAx crayon 


guage. 


| 


| 


makers are patiently waiting for the 
house-warming party at Pellerin’s. 
. _ s 


e-- eee 2 Recorded production of milk in Aus- M ‘+ Weatherb 4 int 
’ tralia during the past five years has rs. . eatherby an ‘ant 
| : WEMBLEY NEWS $$ | ivtrasea 1117000 000 sallons per daughter arrived home from the 
- eo meoeeern® fyesr. Of this quantity, 913,000,009 hospital on Friday. 
WEMBLEY UNITED CHURCH gallons (81.7 per cent) were used in ee e 


Among business callers in Grande 
|Prairie last week were Mrs. Piatt, 
R. Crowe, A. Lind and A. Steiner. 
Mrs. Harold Davies and daughter 
of Berwyn have been enjoying a 
holiday at the Davies home here. 
J s 


Mr. White had the misfortune of 
losing a valuable cow recently. 
; oe a e 


|. Mr. Bertrand, travelling for the 
|Rawleigh Company, made his fall 
trip through the Goodwin district 
last week. 


The Brown family, formerly of 
the Bezanson district, have moved to 
the A. Kierner farm and will make 
their home there for a while. 

* * @ 


, Mr. and Mrs. Ike Duerkson came 

up from the lease on Friday and 

visited at the Dana home, taking in 
the dance while here. 
= * * 


Mr. Otto Krause made a business 
trip to J. Newman's on Sunday. 
7 


| F. Munroe and son, Ivin, who have 


spent the last couple of months on 
the outside, arrived home the other 
day and brought in a_ threshing 
machine with them. 


Ridiculous 
Smith had not been feeling too good, 
| so he called on the doctor. 
| Dector (after examining him) “Why 
man, you're all right; you are good for 
a thousand years yet.” 
Smith—*Dinna blether, 
niver see the holf o' that.” 


doctor; 1.1 


” GENUINE 
SCOTCH 


re 
sha 4 wie! 
4 


JOHN 
BEGG 


IIIPORTED 
OLD SCOTCH 


WHISKY 


thru 


DISTILLED AND MATURED 
IN SCOTLAND 


This advertisement is not inserted by 
the Alta. Liquor Control Board or vy 
the Govt. of the Province of Alberta 


THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 19368 
Ld 


Progress of 


/ Oil fF 
The last aritecle on the subject of! 


By J. L. 
Alberta's progress in oi] development | 
was published by the Department of 
Lands and Mines on June 30, 1988, at 
the ciese of the half year. 

Since ther many requests for addi- 
tional information regarding develop- 
ments have been received. Due prin- 
cipally to rapid and constant changes 
appearing almost from day to day, t 

been exceedingly difficult to pub- 
lish anything further which might not 
become aimost immediately outdated. 
In compliance, however, with these re 
quests a brief review of events cover- 
ing the first nine months of this year 
is herein given. 


NUMBER OF WELLS 


By the end of September Alberta had 
a total of 123 producing oil wells. Of 
this number 113 were in Turner Valley 
and the remainder in other fields. 

The number in the Valley was divi 


Alberta 
This! Year 


IRWIN 


Statistician, Dept. of Lands and Mines, Govt. of the Province of Alberta 


daily. The estimated cost of the re-|ing the spiel for “Here and There on 
pressuring plants was unofficially set|the Air” with this guy on CJCA 
at $2,000,000, The purpose of such/publicity Release batting out his 
The above Alberta oil 


production is 
secured approxiamtely as follows: 


Turner Valley crude oil 


recovered from the limestone.. 88.5% uce gas an uentities desi . By |announcers ... something that sets 
Turner Valley Naphtha thie han the contention yt them apart from other folks—They 
recovered from the limestone.. 10.0% | that gas pressure of the field would be|enjoy talking about their mistakes! 
—~ Valley crude oil recoy- maintained and the absorption plants|Going into the matter, I discovered 
—_, ieanokaien thes teethiben would continue to operate. the reason. Usually, announcers’ 
from other Alta. fields........ 15% A NEW OBJECTIVE errors turn into g jokes 7 - after 

- - Conservation as now practised b;|the hot blush that follows them has 

100.0% | the Board fills a long felt want in it:| waned away. And after the sponsor's 


The total for the first six months of 
this year is 2,829,370 barrels, an in- 
crease of 1,858,807 over the first six 
months of last year and of 32,462 over 


the total of last year’s entire produc- Phen “A . prize boner, made during his 

tion. ‘ Increase for the first eight = iret a eataaenen —, week at the malorophione. Intending 
months of this year over the same pe |" . : ,|to say, “The noonday ow presents,” 
riod last year is 2,838,175 barrels. by the prospect that the deplorable | y P co | 


With the above figures as a guide, 


it is reasonable to assume that Alb. 


bridge and other points and 20 million 
cubic feet needed by the industry tn 
Turner Valley itself. 

Private Interests, charging such ai. 
order would enforce closing of some / 
the four absorptin plants operating in 
the Valley, asked for time te consider 
with a view to possibly developing a 
re-pressuring scheem. As a result of 
this appeal the enforcement order was 
delayed until October 15th, 

Estimates of gas burned as waste 
run as high as 150,000,000 cubic feet 


plants would of course be to return 
the gas to the limestone after extrac - 
tion of the naphtha content and the 
naphtha wells could as a result pro- 


relationship to orderly development 
and its protection to the Iife of th« 
field. The regulating and conserving 
of production on the basis now in force 


has established a new confidence ia 


wastage of gas with its resultant loss | 


of pressure will be halted and ensure’ 


THE NORTHERN TRIBUNE 


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HERE and THERE “On the Air” 


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Looks like I've lost my job of writ- 


weekly home run. Here's what he 
has to say this week: 
I have found out something about 


anger has been soothed! 

In a recent midnight gabfest CJCA 
announcer Norris Mackenzie started 
the ball rolling by recounting his | 
first 


Norris came forth with this amazing 
declaration, ‘““The noondo shay pre- 


0 Bey: " - : cae also by an orderly development which | sents”! | 
ded as follows: te Uaaite akan tot = must lead to increased exploitation That started things. Another ; 
Crude oil wells ........ ao Brunei which in 1987 beat Alberta's One Suscnmaes = = le éonetds spieler confessed his membership in| . sedate Micution tae am 
Crude oil recovered above total by some 1,500,000 barrels. It is eration by oe British Admiralty of the the a a. . = ment vhich vil ‘measure the heat of 
, the iimestone = eS hid safe also to predict that it will als» building of a pipe-line from Calgary slip in news broa pow ng. P pope | Two of Canada’s best known actors, Raymond Massey, left, and t stay billions of miles awa 
Naphtha producers from put this province in the same oil-pro , ae across the phrase, “struck a snag, ‘an ; A . 
the limestone Ties grace 50 ducing class as Burma and Bahrein bo Vancouver for wna puaneee of erent he was amazed to hear “snuck a Walter Huston, will return shortly to their native country to play 7- ee 
— Island in the Persian Gulf which last | '™& ®& new source of oll supply for ” om ~| leading roles in CBC's series of Shakespearean dramatizations More than half of the 4,000 United 
Total 113 year with productions around 7,750,- Sas ‘unrtiiced “caine onary toe a anate «Sem his voce Massey will be presented by CBC in “Richard the Second” on | Se Vaeenteave a Be took up orme 
2 , - \ ° , : ¢ , » ¢ 7 ri . j . -t “ > sd fan 1 «6Spanish civi war apparently 
Note: In addition to this total .,| 000 barrels vied with each other for| jade to the Alberta Government it ia It was then disclosed that nearly Sunday, November 27, Huston will play the title role in Othello, Peg Bo Reh, 
number of wells were closed in. with aver LAGER ee tarein beni tmaponalbte to comiribate Saything fut-lall topmotehers, seesoned veterans of| {he hext program in CBC's national network series, Sunday, Novem- | 7. es 
? , - P E “| ther to this published information. i ve their hobias. er 6, ; m. 8 i as i 1e i ; | — eee offiets ol i taied os 
RE Ps gg ir yh an eed easy first. Whether in the future history of David heoe "Che Scet announcer, Theatre in New York, where both stars were rehearsing their cur- onan bean A canoe Pt = arty mae 
drilling in this area total 21 with an] PETROLEUM ANDO NATURAL GAS) 4lberta’s oll industry pipe-lines ot |O\ ce referred to musician Tito Guizar rent Broadway successes. Massey portrays, with great success, the | rehabilitating families who lost) their 
additional 14 drilling in other fields railways are to be chosen as carriers oT ‘ d his si central figure in Robert E. Sherwood’s “Abe Lincoln in Illinois, homes in forest fires in the Fort fran 
Within the next oe the major CONSERVATION BOARD is a question which has not as yet |@5 Tito Guitar an . os while Huston plays the role of Peter Stuyvesant in “Knickerbocker ces, Ont. area 
rtion of the drilling wells will most As previously stated the Petroleum | been answered. The importance of a |Guizar. Graham MacNamee, back Holiday.” Like Massey, Huston has also portrayed presidential roles °- 2e 
po . s S*\and Natural Gas Conservation Board] suitable means of transportation in the days when he did announcing nay. - “Eom ¢ . . “ pl tay Pf : 
probably be completed. was formed this year and opened its] either by the former or the latter at|chores on Ed Wynn's program, once He literally startled the theatrical world with his splendid charac- the New Zealand governemnt ia 
In other Alberta fields many inter offices in July with Calgary as its greatly reduced freight rates—is now c lled line Mieemeloes” ° terization of Abraham Lincoln in the motion picture of the same sending to Mngland 30 airmen for spe 
esting tests are now in operation - y bite gaso 8 name, and he is the only actor thrice to portray Presidents of the elal training, to return as pilots in the 
amongst which the following are men- | 2&@4qauarters and with a field office in| a very real one. Serious consideration Equally embarrassing to an- ame, § y pi y $ a wieliaea Ghoawadt Peammniie meaeiiaiee 
tioned: The Pouce Coupe ‘wells near | Turner Valley. of same is of vital importance to the|nouncers can be unintentional mis- United States. i tn pi iiabedinires 
the Alberta-British Columbia boundars | __: F- Knode, well-known Texts con-| rapidly increasing growth of Alberta's :t I a in Einglanc eahbe: 
x eb te sh CO umbia poundary | sulting engineer and conservation ex-| oil production—a growth which may |Wording of fan mail. For ins e, , " 
in the Peace River country; the Home| ort, highly recommended to the Alb- bring Canadaa to second place in the |listener recently wrote in requesting |the stage directions with plenty of ;Maestro Harris strongly suspects it Members of the British Legion, ready 
easean and Ray — bet on _ 5 b erta Government by the United States| British Empire by the close of this|of a certain announcer that he play | feeling! was a fellow Benny gagster. to sail for Czecho-Slovakia to! police 
| en ie a — uth of T ~~ vale Bureau of Mines, was appointed as the} year. “The Butcher Boy” on his morning Instead of being embarrassed by When next you dial Benny’s gang | (he proposed plebiscites in mixed popu 
icon. the kom “at Gaaetey, miles| Chairman. Other members are C. W Pending a decision on this question.|show. “And play it for my little|mistakes, many a top-ranking radio|(Sundays, 5 p.m., CJCA) be on the oon ue ap toe 
west of Olds; the Altoba well on the| Dingman, late Director of the Petro- | allowable production must of neces |brother,” the lad wrote. “He cut his!funster has capitalized on them. Jack | listen for boners . and hear the} \" a oar 
earw y outh | eum and Natural Gas Division of the | sity be held down to a seasonal and|finger while listening to your pro- ‘Benny's cast make boners pay divi-|laughs they get! ;, . i ba : 
Cast Of the Ham’ River welt: the tt| Department of Lands and Mines and | localized market. Without a doubt the | 228 “nn atnee aaa Ronad Seow Gua tae 4 har \ meteor, throwing off a stream of 
east of the Ram River well; the test!» G. Cottle, late audior of the Board | establishment of a great reserve in the | 874m the other day. ; ends. ey Gont wy Ww cover Up. . 7 9 sparks and‘followed by a trail of flame 
at Steveville, 70 miles north-west of > J , ~ Another fan forwarded this cheers | Instead, they do their best to make it Pe Te ea ee a Y ennited’ to bave tallen aoutiuner at 
of Public Utility Commissioners. oresent producing areas or in the area : : Well, that about illustrates that it’s | is reported ’ n | 
° ¢ 9 1 p & “ey? "a ee " elu, 
Medicine Hat; two wells near Lund- | of a second major field will assist very |f¥l note: “I’ve been listening to your/embarrassing for the fellow who human to err. Radio manufacturers, | Ott1wa. Efforts to locate it were un 
breck in the Crowsnest Pass area and PRORATION OF WELLS | ter ad tend t reed , |program every morning for 18'makes the slip ...funny for the a vos saggy Rppaage Sy | successful 
one east of Milk River, close to the in | mater y an © speed up anj ; “We. ‘rible.” +e ay. #* . however, seem to have taken that a 
ternational boundary. At Vermilio. With reference to crude of] produc. | acti in this direction. months, and I think you're ter ri le. audience watching the embarrass- into account in the 1988-80 dets. 
near Lloydminster a well is being drill-| tion figures already given it was state 1} The announcer, contending that every ment. They've made them practically fool- An stensi campaign against re 
) E 3 | os : . ac 2 y be . reteee., ' 1 fa mrt of Windhoek to Get 
ed for gas. Fields which have already| in the last article that a factor to be knock is a boost and that 18 months! As a matter _of fact, the Benny lproof for the dialer Sane cadic mm of any 4 ro A Ma 
been productive of oil and which are| taken 7 consideration hele that upt ( F Branch is a long oe + yoga eo a a jerew. = and off the b et AW. help leditor Will Whitmore: itis ; yy -<'t u sborus™ now ‘ ae wane 
enlarging their operations include Del| Sept. 12, 37, such production w ° e ° ee;“Well, if I'm pun at least am jeach other get so use o being em- rican League 0 vein ‘ 
Bonita in the international boundary | representative of the entire capaci : subtle about it.” , barrassed that they can keep their| “The new radio receivers for the | ther apr aateg 
area: Moose Dome, 30 miles west oi| wells. From that date on wity/th» |——— (Continued trom Page One) -——'"" One oft-repeated radio yarn con-|wits about them when a tongue-|1938-39 season are marvels of a cdhaatis et poe 
Sekary: Paper. cast of Lethbridge and | tepame necessars for the marketiag Costs $100, let it be sold for that and |cerns a certain Salt Lake City actress. | twister comes along. No one escapes |mechanical ingenuity. About all one oe eee. eens ue. SeCteee 
: . became necessary for the marketiag COS 1 e solid for that and | ce . ; he aot er ein aaah tan ind heir to the Earl of Derby, who 
Ribstone in the Lloydminster district. panne ap Ry with 4 scnantnal eunaene tae | there will always be money available|Her script required an emotional his turn at being heckled—but they needs to tune a radio set is to think kA Seneitte in: a Eondon: oliain wal 
OIL PRODUCTION TOTALS inery ties taxed to full capa- to buy it and with our modern in-|“shiver” at the appropriate moment, |all enjoy being the butt of a gag as of it and, presto! wheels turn, | Ganada and opened the Canadian 
ref facili axed I y 
In the last blisheda ticl tw | city, to institute proration of the pur-| ventions production need not be but, instead of emoting the business, | well as perpetrating it. lights flash, and your radio brings in National Exhibition at Toronto thie 
production tables were given “One in chases. limited. the actress read the line: “Oh, it’s SO Don Wilson, for instance, is never |another station. Being lazy, we're] your 
* annual totals from 1914 to 1937, re- Towards the end of April with pro-| Hon. H. W. Allen spoke of the re-|cold'in here (SHIVER)"—and read | allowed to forget his excess avoirdu- |much in favor of it all. And broad- ee 
vealed a grand total for the 23 year| ration varying from time to time it was Jation of the U.F.A. with the C.C.F.— - ——— j|}pois when he’s around the studio, |casters might note that these new tecruits continue to enlist in the 
period of 13,772,302 barrels. The oth2;! decided that new tests should be made the main difficulty seemingly to be because every type of reducing | gadgets make it all the easier for the] vresxular army in increased numbers de- 
Was a comparative monthly production] 0 an eleven day basis, a well to run in the place the C.C.F. can take in I HE WORLD gadget on the market is presented | public to tune out stations with poor | spite the peaceful solution of the Buro- 
statement for 1936 and 1937 showing | for ten days on the proration previous- | hi i It had ed to him at some time or another by | signals . and tune in a good one. | pean crisis, the War Office announced 
, y i A ly established and on the eleventh da, | the province. t a been argu n " . recently The past week 949 were en- 
ee ee, veety  weeranase. jon {on open-flow production. The new that the U.F.A. government had not OF W H EAT hecklers. Jack, himself, considers a|Another excellent development is the rolled, 528 more than in the corresp- 
petition of this table, with the addition B i Pp hs ufficientl rr i Fur- day wasted if he hasn’t managed to|introduction of more high fidelity | ()yih). Sook or 1087 
of another giving the totals for the] potential by which proration was t been s ently progressive. r eae ‘ od wh a on agen Ta, i nding « of 7 
first 8S months of 1937 and 1938, are as| Calculated was to be eare-thiete of ther, the ay od | of the U.F.A. can By H. G. L. STRANGE oa nedyhonga Mary Pas ae bow ee ae eh e. pd s ae Tae eee cs. @ 
ms : open flow as demonstrated on the 11th on] ed b con n. rec . epartment, Searle|audience by pointed remarks abo i 2 é 5 , § Berlin has four thousand five hun- 
ascagsss 1936 1937 Increase day. | Poltticet et A ig bene vo on Grain Co. Lumited , j her new hat. The culprit whoj|tuning gadgets. And we'll = use] qpeg “and titty ares. Aanationin resi 
B 1 Bar el Barrels This proration varied from time tuo cause many parties to enter the field iswitched a box of blank shells on|monkey wrenches and screw drivers, | gents 
ine 105.171 127.077 80g | time depending on transportation faci- jp the coming provincial election and |, !t looks as though there will soon be/ phil Harris, making him miss the|/if necessary, to tune in on a station i 
i 96.077 140/515 Estes: CERG Sorted Whee an Radi. thereby all th tion three international conferences study-|firgt dozen birds at a shooting tour- |that’s putting out a strong signal and Belgium is seeking ways to reduce 
Feb... S57 161 832 tional pipe-line from the field to Cal- May ereby allow e reactionary | ing the wheat situation § nuvesitnaet sauntivaten:. 
Mar... 101,857 U1. gary was under construction, and on) Parties to be left supreme in the The London Wheat Committee wi'l — —_—___—_—__---— ae 
Apr. Stee = Saat storage and market conditions. Onj|field. A provincial platform should |}. nolding another meeting, The U.S sk Ratha Ts ENE meant seo re , : 
May. p+ Bh 4 phys 2 September 2nd the Board issued its be based upon fact and experience| jis endeavoring to arrange a confer- 
July. 122,771 2215,000 first allotment of permitted oil pro-'rather than enthusiasm. ence, and now atill another meeting 66 9 1 
July 124.287 371 S98 duction, The schedule was based on a| ©, O, Pool, a radical member of the| has been called by Manitoba. , O N I H A oe ver tation 
oan 120.210 O51'154 market —— of ee ase? Psd U.F.A., stated that a small cooperative These separate international confer. 
Oct. 120,638 325,723 205,085 trit A thin aaunenl “amm azet erude \did not have much chance to flourish with, see endleteinewea th heat te wd Sund N ber 6 6:00 Tarzan 7:30—-Light Up and Listen Club 
S re —— on1¢« ” ) § “ é nes ig ; y s =) yhee $ a. q " ember 4 arzi yy sing ‘ ait 
Des. = og S84 ee wt producers by application of a formula pa. oe Pay ind 5 ahh Rn of the United States, Canada and the o: aa Pap _— 6:30——Musical Moods 7:45-—Music and Song } 
. ee = which included the factors of gas-oil| Argentine. The probable result of oo a , 6:45-—Jimmy Allen S:00-—Sustaining 
. 320.442 2796.9008 ratio, bottom hole pressure, well spac-| general abandonment of capitalism.) these discussions will be an effort t» 10:00—From the Lighter Classics 7:00. are 8:80—Request Program 
Total 1,320,442 2,796, ing and measured flow through a two-|He challenged the reference to in- persuade Canadian and American far 11:00—Church Service 7:16-~hat Was the Yeas 9: 00—News 
The increase for 1937 over 1936 was]|inch nipple. A second allotment fol-|tolerance. and spoke of the tendency| mers to reduce their wheat acre: F 12:15—Gems from Light Opera 7:30 Ldeht Up aan: Gimtee. Chute G iadiainastinhall Sroevam 
1,476,466 barrels. lowed on Sept. 12 ta take care of the;of reactionaries to divide the pro- | (Argentina now states she will NO'T 1:00—Lutheran Hour 7: i Music and Song 10:00--Sign off i 
1937 1938 Increas>| newly completed wells, but re: gressive groups, citing the case of | reduce her acreage). ar 2:00—Your Favorite Songs 4 a ae ‘ ; 
Month Barrels Barrels Barreis| the same market demand. A_ third.) the C.C.F. and Social Credit in Sas- Certain large European countri ». 2:15—Organalities $:380—Request Program um Friday, November II | 
Jan 127.977 444.196 $16,219 | Made Sept. 24. cared for new comple- katchewan elections as a_ recent] re holding similar conferences with « 2:30—Gems of Melody ad | 
Feb... 140.515 401,587 261,072] tions and a drop in market to 22, \example view to reducing their production o1 2: 45 Wunnies with tracie Jerr ):00—News 7:46-—Dawn Patrol | 
Mar... 161,832 467.732 305.900] barrels per day. pie. t ident of | beef. veal, bacon, cheese, lard, vege oe eee nes ee ware 9:15-— dueational Program §:00—News { 
ay #o'¢. - « sepes i nN on was due entirely o ° , > forth so t Mey can bd ni OO- ; p ~ 
172.608 447241 274.638 This reducti 1 tirely | Mr. Jobson, a former resident of | jopics and so forth. that they 3:00—Parade of Talent 10;00——Sign off 8:1 ‘avainade 
athe 175 997 546-719 370, T2 the seasonal demand of a fluctuating |Saskatchewan, stated that the C.C.F. raise more wheat (for more peopie can 4:00—Musical Moments §: 15-—Cavaleade 
-_.. 191.634 521.895 330.261] 4nd localized market. Such demand, |suffered in that province because its| pe fea with wheat than with livestock 4:30—Music and Flowers ial ieheedinn tevember © io—Hymn Time 
a. 226000 678.24: 452.243 which had previously risen with the program was not clear. products grown on the same acres). 4:45—Pianograms —_ . S:O%-Cush Grain Prices 
b> Abt 271.898 799.023 527.125] phenomenally large wheat crop in the Mayor P. J. Tooley preferred to Why not combine all these proposed 5:30-—-Hymn Time 7:45 Dawn Patrol 9:00-—Road Report 
i, alana: aredaenee west increasing oil requirements fo |)fsten rather than ta but he re-| meetings, one might ask, and hold just 6:00-—News 8: 00——News §:05—-Morning Meditations 
468,461 4,306,636 the harvest, having diminished with iterated his sympathy * and support | one international conference; ani 6:15—Si rt &:15—Band Stand 9:30—Conoert Caravan 
« J . . as ; :15—sS r ee yy wes 4 36 
en nn phar the harvest operations drawing to 9) C¢ the U.F.A. organization. He be-| there concentrate on making plans to | 1S —SIER O 8: 30-—Cavaleade (0: Gi hentwaland: Mnvile 
close. lieved the . F. A. should more aa the Unie a Retes Ue ee pa a vy =| a.m Monday, November 7 8:45—Hymn Time 10:15—-Monitor Views the News 
“¢ . t 28, : Ss . ty IP Ce ” Su rig 
P T le CONSERVATION OF GAS definitely declare its future policy, aeede ‘and products of the European 7:45—Dawn Patrol 8:59-—Cash Grain Prices 10:30-—Dan and tabbed 
e e oo y Regarding conservation of gas from as its attitude latterly had been very countries, Which they would like ‘to | 8: 00-——News 9:00 Road Report 2 bo nae f = a 
Agent for naphtha-producing wells the Board undecisive. He preferred to see€/send to us, and which we certainly 8:18—Rand Stand 9:05--Morning Meditations tte os a a hs Ee 
SASKATCHEWAN MUTUAL issued an —— a) pete Seer 14'some unity in e new political] badly need. Then ours masmore, the 8:80. > ec Hy 0: 30- Coneets Caravan . > . . I's onder Medicin 
curtailing production of same to '- |movements. European people and all of us would oo yn 10:00—-Betty Brown 2:3 Chandu 
hcl saagttas xt tad yeoman eens Cate vide 20,000,000 Leslie Harris would not blame Mr.| certainly be much better off. Ht 4 te ee gg 10:15—Monitor Views the News = a of Peter McGre or 
ay ed ¢ Bch owi here to go eo: ‘ 10:30—-On the Brighter Side 00-—News 
Phone 13 Grande Prairie } | 2™° x  Calezary, Leth- |rooley for not knowing w g =! ;, 0 
cubic feet required by Calgary, Leth- |; . ; Rae , ) :00-—-Road Report 45 : ws 1 ‘4 Gr a 
wel Le if the U.F.A. left the field provin- Following factors have tended t 10:45-—-Dan and Sylvia 1:15—-Cash Grain Prices 
cially. He did recommend that this | raise price:—Large areas in Australi. 9:6 Morning Meditations 11:;00—-Morning Bulletin Board 1:30--Around the Chuck Wagon 
|group organize and teach the U.F.A.| now beyond recovery — Main India 9:30-——Concert Caravan 12:00-——Caterpillar Boys 1:45- Guess What 
|the need for the continuation of the | rain areas unusually dry~-Deteriora : 50: G0-—~Theatreland Revue 12:15—Dr. Bell's Wonder Medicine — 2:00—-Hits of the Day 
Co-operative Commonwealth in| ton from dryness nee ela a Ct tg ond sege al lta 12: 30—-Chandu 2:30-——B.C, Educational Program 
e res 5 tag: Le ‘ : 0:30-—-On righter Side a . : . a ; sie . 
every field. * ‘ent cessation of Indian wheat ex- pa ; 12:45---House of Peter MeGregor 3 O0O-—Canadian Legion, Sexsmith 
C. F. Hopkins, prominent in U.F.A. eete- Hea y winds result in loss t» 10: 45, Dan and ayevee aust 1:00—News 5:00——-Unele fom 
circles for many years, said he was| jaamican banana crop. 11:00-—-Morning Bulletin Boar 1:15-—Cash Grain Prices 5:30 Romantic Rhythms 
not at all excited about the present Following factors have tended to 12 00—Caterpillar Boys 1:30--Around the Chuck Wagon 5:4 Western Echoes 
situation. He preferred to wait. In| lower price Confirmation of large 12:15--Dr. Bell's Wonder Medicine 1:45—Guese What G00. Tarzan 
time a solution would be worked out.} Roumanian wheat sales ve ht nome 12:40--Chandu 2:00-- Hits of the Day 6:30-—Barnacle Bill 
, Seeding progresses satisfactorily +1] | 12:45-—House cf Peter McGregor 4 . = rs ‘ — 6:45--Jimmy Allen 
Ne reen, Sreveeuny — bm Italy, France and Germany —-U.S. yel- | 1:00 + toga 2:30-—B.C. Educational Program . ak ecg 
eer Car oF, "hat suppose low winter wheat arrive ff Meats tk Uni, bdie. Meine = ne ots ee et 
My a “gall r World's ye production m mm) 7 “ee 7 : : 5 nele om Li - : » a . P 
the U.F.A. at some time in the future |), vor +t last year—Pereia sells her | | 1:30 Your Music and Mine 5:30—Romantic Rhythm 7:30—Light Up and Listen Club 
decides to desert the political field wheat to Germany, Italy and Turkey 1:45--Guess What 5:45—Western Echoes 7: 45- Sustaining A 
entirely that great body of people] Cutting starts in early sections of Aus- | 2:00--Home Service Magazine @: Gth../anani S:00--Calling All Travellers 
who had permanently wiped the two] ralia Belgian millers must increase | | 2:30——-B.C. Educational Program 6:30—Barnacte Bill So30--Wuanham Varieties 
old parties off their slate would be] native wheat content in milling, | %:00--Sign off 6:45 Jimmy Allen 9: 00-—News 
left with Social Credit and the Unity || 5:00--Unele Tom 7:00-—News 15 Bdueational Program 
League to support, neither of which| FOR MANY PEOPLE TRAINS WILL | 5:30--Romantic Rhythm 7 15 cube Revival 10; 00---Sign off 
has the might be satisfactory. NEVER LOSE THEIR GLAMOR || 5:45-—Western Echoes 7:30——-Light Up and Listen Club 
rT} | Another observed that the C.C.F. —_—_- — 6:00 Tarzan 7:45 Grande Prairie Marcon tn Saturday, November 12 
,000 gallons the movement called for an advanceall) ay. other day, says B. H. in the 6:30-—Barnacle Bill 8:00--Calling All Travellers eT a eer we rr 
h ageing of all ir wines, along the line. Victoria ‘Times i kept abreast of 4 6:45 Jimmy Allen S230 Waaham Varietios ’ 
n wood, ‘ore bottling. Their wines Rev. Mr. Simpson spoke in aljyeayy grain train down the Fraser 7:00---News 8:45—-Swing Time 00-—Newe 
thus reach you in prime ition. humorous .- vein. To illustrate the Canyon for miles and miles, so close 7:15 -That Was the Year pb: OO} News iia) Breakfast Brevities 
/present situation he told a story of ajthat I could see the tobacco glow tiv 7:30.-Light Up and Listen Ctub 0:15-——Educational Program 0b...ah Clneite Betnen 
|little boy who had one patch on top| the bow! of the engineer's pipe, and 1, 7:45 Grimshaw Marconi 9:45 French Instruction : s 
| of another on the seat of his pants. | found that I wished then, eh ag ory S:0O0-Calling All ‘Travellers :00-- Road Report 
. : as when I was seven years old, rat S30. rs P ‘arietie P ber OH Morning Meditations 
| Patches were oomne ro we ey was a locomotive engineer, with a! er = — - \ pens acm Thursday, November 10 06 ; rnin ditation 
all came off. map mbps waaay oat giant of steam under me, In time, I ‘ “4 mee ena abbas 7:45 Dawn Patrol Hs Concert Caravan 
| was like the boys pants—too rotten dare say, the airplane may acquire a | 9 00 News 8: 00--News 10:00 Theatreland Revue 
jto hold the patches. glamor like that, but not for many! 9:15 -Educational Program : : 10: 18.~Monttan View he Ne 
Following the meeting 24 paid their | voars. We may use it but we shall 9:45—French Instruction 8:15 Breakfast Brevities 5 Moniton ews the News 
. 
dues to the secretary. ‘ never love it as we love a train, An 10:00--Sign off S:59--Cash Grain Prices 10:30. On the Brighter Side 
m Rigby acted as secretary | airplane is a new thing, an upstart. A d is lace $ , . 
at tre mae,” train was our friend in boyhood, and a.m Tuesday, November 8 9:00-——-Road Report — 1! ou ~ ening Bulletin Board 
Petit sip Cosine the sound of ita whistle will always :00-—-Morning Meditations 11: 55—-Cash Grain Prices 
NOVA SCOTIA FISHERMAN GET remain in our hearts, 7:45--Dawn Patrol 9: 30—-Concert Caravan 12:00--Caterpillar Boys 
: wi - — 8S:00-—News 10:00 -Theatreland Revue 12:15 -Cavaleade 
VERY LITTLE FOR HARD WORK : > ; einen tn, tal pe 7 
ovteneeuinss J 000 1S THE TOTAL 8:15—Breakfast Brevities 10: 15--Moniton ews the News 1230 Chandu 
$275 mr; ~y VEARIO INSURANCE wo 10:30--On the Brighter Side i2:45--Sports News 
ain aphar tates, trom Gautienks 40 citiin 10:45-—'The Friendly Crete 1: 00-—Nows 
pnd * . } 11:00—-Morning Bulletin Board 1:15—-Your Musie and Mine 
noon, landed 423 pounds of fish. TORONTO, Oct. 2h, Over $2 5,~ | aos a Senne 12:00- Caterpillar Boys 1:80. Vooal Vasteting 
The Halifax Herald prints the fol- | 490,000 of new ordinary life insurance 9:30-——-Concert Caravan = “pet ; Sa 
lowing report of what happened. was sold in Canada and Newfoundland 10:00——Theatreland 12:15-—-Cavaleale 1:45 Matinee Melodies 
For the catch, the fishermen had to , the first nine months of the! 10:15-—-Monitor Views the News 12 80--Chandu 2:00 Tits of the Day 
during | 4 5 i 
deduct $1 for delivery to market, leav-| yoay according to returns compiled by | 10:30—-On the Brighter Side 12:45--Sports News 2:80-—Sign oft 
ONCORD ing ¥2.68 to pay for three men's work, | ing Life Insurance Sales Research bu- 13: Odesdtarnine Bulletin Board eh BRR aed 5:00-—Uncle ‘fom 
©) < gasoline, bait, and upkeep of boat and] ony and given out by the Canadian 12:00-——Caterpillar Boys 1:15--Cash Grain Prices 5: 30---Variety 
gear. ; Life Insurance Officers’ assoctatio ‘ ~aP- < . 1:30-—Voeal Varieties 5:45—Your Favorite Songs 
Of the 424-pound catch, 424 pound. Sales in Alberta of 18 companies 12 . Cepeiene fe oe ¥ sy ae ? 
were sold to retail customers, having S7 per cent of the total insur. | lac: Chandu ata ae “Pr ep GO: B00N ‘al Mood 
The consumers paid for those #24] ance in force, exclusive of group and 12:45-—-Sport News 2:00 Hits of the Day 30-—-Musical Moods 
C ATAW BA pounds of fish a total of $80.20. wholesale insurance, annuities, pension 1:00-——News 2. RO B. Ndueational Program 6 iis) Hawaiian Harmony 
Housewives paid almost ten times boards, ete, totaled $11,802,000, In 1:15—Grain Prices 8:00 Sign off 7:00 News 
the gross earnings of the fishermen. surance sales in Alberta in the montn 1:30——Voeal Varieties 5:00 Unele Tom 7:15 Rhythm Revels 
MY rte Ah ioe pod ag hen on rao grt of September totaled $1,186,000, 1:45 Matinee Melodies 5: 80 Varlety 7:80 -Sunset Serenade 
TINH. FPOCIELC CASO WOFe SECO f 2 dD 5:45 Melody Time 7:4) Muaste and Song 
do not know. But study of prices paid Not Likely +4 —_ oS ee ey Program 6: 00--’Parzan S:00 > Sustaining 
% Sone ge win hoe Bothy MA. He was pestered by his littl son 8: 00—Sign off 20-1 Saw It in The Flerald S: RO Request Program 
onvumer over The Z ’ ‘ ; by . 
a ery wide 1 mt . One evening as he 5:00—-Unele Tom 6:45 Jimmy Allen 0:00 News 
eye sre Sage Sng: Senses. San dawe tet a quiet read a amet voice 5 80. Variety 7:00—-News §: 1 —To be announced 
wooo. -eceeoewwoes coo ooooe piped 5:45-—-Your Favorite Songs 7:1%—-Kkhythm Revels 10,;00.-Sign off 


ot Inserted by the Alberta Liquor Contro) Board or 


This Advertisement ls N rovince of Alberta 


by the Government of the P 


¢ TRIBUNE CLASSIFIED ADS. 
‘ BRING RESULTS 


“Daddy, ani I made of dust?” 
“I think not,” said the father, “other- 
wise you'd dry up now and then.” 


Edited by Arthur Jackson 
STARS OF “RICHARD THE SECOND” AND “OTHELLO” 


ee eee 


ein 


a 


PAGE Five 


And while we're on the subject of 
good signals and good shows, we 
recommend for the next seven days’ 
dialing the following CJCA features: 

Friday — Beverly Baxter from Lon- 
don, England (8-8:15 p.m.). 

Saturday—-N. H. L. Hockey Broad- 
cast (7-8:30 p.m.). 


Sunday Walter Huston in 
)“Othello” (7-8 p.m.). 
| Monday—Cecil B. DeMille’s pro- 


duction, “Radiom Theatre” (7-8 p.m.). 
Tuesday Edward G. Robinson, 
Claire Trevor, in “Big Town” (9:30- 
/10 p.m.). 
Wednesday 
formative 


F. N. Johnson's in- 
“Camera Club of the Air” 


(9:45 p.m.) 
| Thursday —-M.G.M. stars in “Good 
News of 1939" (7-8 p.m.). 


Here and There 


PAGE SIX 


THE NORTHERN TRIBUNE _ 


ILLUSTRATED NEWS OF THE WEEK 
SNAPSHOT CUIL 


SNAPSHOTS FROM THE AIR 


LONDON’S FIRST BALLOON BARRAGE EXERCISES 


Extensiv 
against 


e tests are being carried out over London : 
the air raid menace—the balloon barrage. This picture shows one of the balloons ascending 


with one of 


from the Moat of the Tower of London. 


BOS ISBISTER 


who k 


icked them to the Dominion cham- 


He has been somewhat troubled with a sore 
fast rounding into his usual form 


aaa FACTS REVEALED | 


tox EDWARD G ROBINSON onc 


—by “Movie Spotlight” 


TWO DAYS TO LEARN HOW TO PLAY THE 
CONCERTINA FOR HIS ROLE IN COL UMeiAS i 


"1AM THE LAW“ 


MR. ROBINSON #45 MANy FANS if 
THE UNDERWORLD WHO SEND H/M 
UNSOLICITED POINTERS OW TECHN) aol | 

AND VOCABYVLARY LIKE... 74 


2 


WENDY BARRIE was cuncwine ar 
THE SAVOY IN LONDON WHEN APPROACHED 
SYA FAMOUS DIRECTOR WITH AN OFFER OF 
A SCREEN TEST WHICH RESULTED INA 
LEADING ROLE. 


HER FATHER 7a4VELLED SOMUCH 


rar SARBAPRA OWNEIL 


RECEIWED HER EDUCATION PIECE - 
MEAL ALL CVE THE WoRkco/ 


OTTO AUGER 
BOUGHT A MOUNTAIM 
IN UESTATE NEW 
YORK TO SAVE THE 
10000 PINE TREES 


43 re 


JOHN BEAL 
TOOK TIME OFF 
FROM H/$ THEATRICAL 
PURSUITS TO STUby | 
MULUSTRATION AT ia 
ART STUDENTS Lé. 

IN NEW YORK 


Chane Pomun Yer er 


4? > 
tS 


Tribune Want Ads Bring Results 


the newly developed defenses 


Air Forces of the 
British Empire 


By J. W. Neil 


THE ROYAL CANADIAN AIR 
FORCE 


HISTORICAL: 


In June, 1914, two officers of the 
Canadian Defense Force were sent to 
England in connection with the pro- 

posed establishment of a flying corps, 
but nothing came of this beginning. 

The foundation of the Royal Cana- 
dian Air Force may be said to have 
been laid in 1916, when the War 
Office decided to establish in the 
Dominion an organization for train- 
ing Conadion personne! for the Royal 
Fl ying Corps. The original proposal 

was to form twenty training squad- 
rons. to be known as No. 78 to 97 
(Canadian) Reserve Squadrons, each 
from a nucleus flight sent out from 
Britain. The first fifteen squadrons, 
in three groups of five forming the 
42nd. 43rd and 44th Wings. were 
established at Borden Camp, Deser- 
onto, and North Toronto, respec- 
tively. in July, 1917. 

The next proposal was the estab- 

i of a School of Military 
aeronautics and a Cadet Wing on the 
lines of similar establishments in 
Britain. These were formed at Tor- 
onto and Long Branch, respectively, 


in July, 1917. 

After the entry of the United 
States into the War in April. 1917, 
arrangements were made whereby 
the R.F.C. undertook the instruction 
of officers and other ranks for ten 
American squadrons in Canada dur- 
ing the summer months, in return 
C nich the United States govern- 
“undertook to provide aero- 
to accommodate ten of the 
Canadi an R.F.C. squadrons for win- 

r training. During the winter of 
1917-18 two-thirds of the Canadian 
training organization operated from 
Fort Worth, Texas. Those training 
units which remained in Canada 
q uring the winter achieved remark- 
ab results by flying off snow in 
standard type training aircraft 
equipped with skis. thus demonstrat- 
ing for the first time the possibilities 
of \ ter flying. 

rough 1918 Canada sent to En- 
gland an average of rather more than 
C pilots each month, and, 
nm. supplied a few hundred 
had graduated from the 
and the School of Mili- 
utics but who had not 
1g instruction. 
1 of the Armistice the 
ation of the R.A.F. in 
rised three Training 
(42nd, 43rd and 44th); an- 
win ng of five squadrons in pro- 
a Cadet Wing. a 
of Aerial Fighting, made up 
squadrons: No. 4 School of 
Military Aeronautics; separate 
Schools for Armament; Special Fly- 
ing and Artillery Cooperation; a Re- 
cruits Depot; Engine and Aeroplane 
Repair Parks: a Stores Depot; and a 
Mechanical Transport Section. 

Of all the dominions, Canada made 
by far the greatest contribution in 
man-power to the Imperial Flying 
Services. In the early days of the 
war a large number of Canadians 
went to Britain to join the R-F.C. and 
the R.N.A.S.. and as many as 800 
cadets had been enrolled in the R.F.C. 
alone before the separate 
organization had been set 
Canada. A total of 1239 mh. H... 
officers were seconded or attached to 
the R.F.C., R.N.AS., or R-A-F., while 
the number of other ranks trans- 
ferred and subsequently commis- 
sioned was about 2,750, 10,010 cadets 
and 7,453 other ranks were recruited 
direct into the British Flying Serv- 
ices in Canada, and of the former 
4.280 proceeded overseas. Altogether 
over 8,000 Canadians served as 
officers in the Imperial Flying 
Services. 

In June, 1919, an Act was passed 
in the Canadian House of Commons 
which set up an Air Board to control 
flying in Canada. Under the Air 
Board Act was constituted a small 
training force on a semi-permanent 


cess of formation: 
School 


of four 


When you say, “We went ‘way above the clouds,” why not have a 
snepshot to prove it? 


TS who make air voyages 
without e camera mies a part of 
the thrill. You do not need an espe 
cially designed camera to obtain 
photographs from airplanes. An 
ordinary camera will get interesting 
pictures right through the window 
which you look through as you fty, 
and make yow a picture story of your 
trip that no end of verbal description 
can tell so vividly. 

Make a few snaps about the air- 
port before boarding your ‘plane and 
then, unless you have very fast shut- 
ter speeds, wait before you shoot 
again till you are up at least 1,000 
feet. Naturally the higher the ‘plane 
is traveling the less rapidly will the 
earth slip by and snapshots showing 
the land can be made more easily. 
The most interesting views are taken 
when there are definite contrasts in 
the landscape, as when flying orer 
lakes, rivers and towns. 

If your camera is of the focusing 
type, set it at the “infinity” mark, 
and, on a clear, brilliant day, stop 
f.22 should produce good negatives 
at a reasonably rapid shutter speed. 
When the sun is not so bright, stop 
16 will yield satisfactory results. 
The fastest shutter speed should be 
employed with the average camera; 
this will be 1/60 or 1/100 of a second. 
With faster shutter speeds piciures 
from airplanes can be made at less 


than the 1,000 foot height. With sin- | 
gle iens folding cameras and those of | 


the box type, the second or smaller 
diaphragm stop should be used. Sur 
prisingly good pictures can be made 


basis known as the Canadian Air 
Force. 

On January 1, #923, the Depart- 
ment of Militia and Defense, Naval 
Service and the Air Board, which 
previously administered the Army, 
Navy and Air Force, respectively, 
were amalgamated by the formation 
of the Department of National De- 
fense. As a result, the Canadian Air 
Force on a semi-permanent basis was 
abolished and a newly formed per- 
manent force was granted the prefix 
“Royal” by His Majesty the King. 

The general policy of the Royal 
Canadian Air Force at the outset 
made it responsible for the develop- 
ment and maintenance of air power 
in Canada, air power to include not 
only the Air Force and its reserves 
but the whole development of aero- 
nautics in the Dominion. The prin- 
cipal aims of the Air Force included 
the maintenance of a ent 
force on the smallest scale which 
would effectively provide for (a) 
adequate Air Force training; (b) a 
nucleus around which could be 
formed in time of emergency active 
service units sufficient to meet the 
strategical situation existing; and (c) 
the conduct of all flying operations 
required by other branches of the 
government service, it being the 
Policy of the government, as ex- 
pressed in the Air Board Act, that all 
flying services for the civil functions 
of the government should be carried 
out by one organization. The Royal 
Canadian Air Force therefore be- 
came, to all intents and purposes, a 
government flying service engaged 
primarily in forest fire protection, 
mail route dev elopment, coastal cus- 
toms patrols, air survey and many 
other duties of considerable value 
to the welfare of the country. The 
Civil Operations Branch of the 
R.C.A.F. was responsible for remark- 
able pioneering work in opening up 
the deevlopment of the vast unex- 
plored wealth of the northland: it 
has made possible the surveying and 
mapping of vast areas of hitherto in- 
accessible territory; has co- 
operated with every government 
department in the development and 
exploitation of the valuable natural 
resources of the Dominion. Camp 
Borden, which had been the first 
R.F.C. training station in Canada and 
had been transferred to the Canadian 
government by the British govern- 
ment in 1919, was maintained as a 
training establishment, and for some 
time it was the only R.C.A-F. station 
operating on a purely service basis. 

Heavy demand developed for Air 
Force services by various depart- 
ments of the government, resulting 
from the great possibilities in the use 
of aircraft for mapping, forestry, ex- 
ploration of meteorological condi- 
tions, etc. The forest area under 


year by 
RCAF. gradusily cope ‘By 
ually y 
the end of 1931 over oo 
miles of territory had. 
graphed from the 6: 


and operations suffered. 
The first indication of rehabilita- 
tion came in October, 1933, with the 
authorization by Order-in-Council of 


with box cameras on a clear day at 
1,500 to 2,000 feet. 

If you are fortunate enough to be 
fiying on a brilliant day when there 
are groups of those light, cottony. 
cumulus clouds, and are gliding 
along well above them, make gnap- 
shots wher you pass over rifts 
through which the landscape can be 
seen. To include a wheel of the 
*plane, as in the picture above, adds 
realism and enhances the feeling of 
height. It identifies the picture at 
once as having been made from the 
air. 

Aloft, as on the ground, a color fil- 
ter helps in bringing out clouds and 
details in the distant landscape. 
Larger stop openings will then be 
required—ile size of the opening de- 
pending upon the depth of the coicr 
of the filter. 

Yes, you can take pictures through 
the glass in the windows all right. It 
is especially clear, safety glass, and 
on commercial planes is kept clean: 
but don’t rest your camera on the 
window ledge or any part of the 
‘plane, since even slight vibration 
will affect the sharpness of the pic- 

| tures. Also, don’t shoot across the 
rear of the conical housing of the 
side motors, as the heat waves may 
register on the film and biur the pic- 
ture. 

And don’t forget to take plenty of 
film because there is nothing so pro- 
voking as to find yourself out of am- 
munition and helpless as some unex- 
| pectedly interesting picture goes slip- 
|} ping by beneath you. 

106 JOHN VAN GUILDER 


of the Royal Canadian Air Force 
became more clearly defined. Real- 
ization of the international situation 
has more recently resulted in a pro- 
gram of expansion being embarked 
on in cencert with that of the Mother 
Country in order to place the Royal 
Canadian Air Force on a proper de- 
fense basis. 

Following a moderate increase in 
the federal air vote in 1935-36, a 
sharp increase during the following 
year to £2,350.530 (compared with 
£250,000 in 1932) brought about an 
enhanced resumption of the program 
which was interrupted by the de- 
pression. Provision was made during 
1937 for the acquisition of 102 new 
aircraft, made up of 12 fighters, 
three army co-operation machines, 
seven flving boats, 24 bombers, 11 
torpedo bombers, 18 coastal recon- 
naissance machines, and 27 training 
machines. Orders for a number of 
these have been placed with the 
Canadian aircraft industry. 


ORGANIZATION: 


The Royal Canadian Air Force is 
composed of an Active Air Force and 
a Reserve. The former consists of a 
permanent force of officers and air- 
men permanently employed for con- 
tinuous service; and a non-permanent 
force, consisting of formations and 
units, manned by personnel in 
civilian occupations who annually do 
a limited amount of Air Force train- 
ing. The Reserve at present consists 
of qualified ex-officers of the active 
Air Force. 

The peace establishment of the 
permanent active Air Force is 260 
officers and 1,608 airmen. The peace 
establishment of the non- ent 
active Air Force is 227 officers and 
1,418 airmen. 


TYPES OF AIRCRAFT USED: 

Training—D.H. “Tiger Moth; Fleet 
Trainer, Avro “Tutor,” Avro 626. 

Army Co-operation — Armstrong- 
Whitworth “Atlas.” 

Fighting — Armstrong-Whitworth 
“Siskin III.” 

Coastal Reconnaissance—Canadian 
Vickers “Vancouver.” 

Civil Operations—Canadian Vick- 
ers “Vedette,” Fairchild 71, Fairchild 
Super 71, Canadian Vickers Northrop 
“Delta,” Bellanca “Pacemaker.” 


PERSONNEL: 

Officer personnel of the Royal 
Canadian Air Force is obtained from 
the gradyates of the Royal Military 
College, Kingston, or from graduates 
in Science or Arts of Canadian 
universities. Canadidates for enlist- 
ment in technical trades must at 
least hold a certificate of Junior 
Matriculation, or its equivalent. 


TRAINING: 

The training of personnel of the 
R.C.A.F. follows very closely that of 
the Royal Air Force. In order to 
keep in touch with the R.A-F. train- 
ing syllabuses and methods, a num- 
ber of officers and airmen attend 
R.A.F. training courses in England 
each year. A number of officers are 
also exchanged with the Royal Air 
Force every two years, and a Royal 
Canadian Air Forse laison officer is 
stationed in London to keep in ech 
with technical developments and 
equipment. 

OPERATIONS: 

Civil operations of the R.C.A. F. 
during the financial ae 1936-37 
were undertaken for mere 
Canadian Mounted Police" the 
partment of Trade and BH Rian 
Mines and Resources, 

Public Works, Interior vier cd Na 


THUKSDAY, NOVEMBER 38, 1938 


A SPECIAL TRIBUNE FEATURE 


THE BEST OF THE WEEK'S INTERESTING NEWS PICTURES 


“DOING THE LAMBETH WALK” 


This time it is right outside the Lambeth Town Hall, upon the 
occasion of the opening of a new extension to the building by Queen 
Mary. In this picture the police are doing their best to restrain the 
enthusiasm of the children as the Queen Mother approached. 


SAAR 0226 


THE CLIMBING AND SWIMMING CAR 


A new type of car, designed by a German, which it is claimed 
operates satisfactorily on land, in the water, or going up or down 


stairs, undergoes a test in Rome. 


It is shown mounting the steps of 


the Trinita dei Monti, in Spanish Square. 


GERMAN HUMOR 
“Now if you get another spasm of sleep-walking you won't bump 


your face against the walls!’ 


Defense; and for the provincial 
government of Nova Scotia. Work 
included preventive patrols for the 
R.C.M.P., forest fire Se in the 
Canadian national 


OKLAHOMA CITY SUFFERED A 
FLOOD AFTER LONG DRY SPELL 


It was tough when Disney, Oklaho 
ma, was without water. It was just 
as tough when ~water came. Short of 
supply since mid-July, residents left 
their faucets oper constantly to catch 
every drop that entered the maina. 
City engineers found a good flow, an. 
hooked it on without notice. The new 
water supply boomed into the mains, 
the faucets, the homes. Disney suf- 
fered a flood. 


-_ 


‘—Lustige Kolner Zeitung, Cologne. 


SIR JOHN ANDERSON 


Formner Governor of Bengal, 
who is mentioned as a likely 
appointee to the British Cabinet 
as new Minister of Volunteer 
Detense Work, 


THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1938 


_BytheGleaner 


Mr. and Mrs. Alex Campbell left 
on Friday's train for Edmonton. 

Mrs. A. Frizzell, daughter Jennie 
and son Reub, and Mr. and Mrs. 
Percy Frizzell, of Lacombe, were 
week-end visitors at the home of Mr. 
and Mrs. Harold Frizzell. They re- 
turned home by car on Monday. 


The Women's Association of St. 
Paul's United Church will hold their | 
regular meeting at the home of Mrs. | 


J. E. Thomson on Wednesday, | 
November 9, at 3 p.m. vi 

W. J. McRae and family of} 
Huallen were visitors in Grande 


_Prairie on Saturday. | 


Mr. and Mrs. Fred Labrecque of | 
Spirit River were visitors to Grande | 
Prairie on Tuesday. 

Mr. and Mrs. Camelle Guenette of 
Falher were visitors to Grande. 
Prairie on Tuesday. They were on 
a honeymoon trip. 

Mr .end Mrs. George Potter and 
family of Rycroft were visitors to the | 
Prairie on Saturday. Mr. Potter, who | 
is the station agent at that point, was | 
on his: holidays. 

Mr. and Mrs. H. Gerard, S. Wills 
of Wanham and Walter Francis of 
Belloy were visitors to Grande 
Prairie on Saturday. | 

=2s = 

Mrs. Frank Crummy left on Fri- 
day’s train for Edmonton, after re- 
ceiving word that her son, Gray, had 
been admitted to the hospital to be | 
operated on for appendicitis. 

Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Miller and family 
of Elmworth, accompanied by Miss 
E. Taylor, were visitors to the Prairie 
on Saturday. 

(Continued on Page Eight) 


Wedding Bells 


SPRAGGS- DICKSON 


At the United Church Manse on 
October 31, in the presence of the 
witnesses only, Clara Elizabeth Dick- 
son of Clairmont was united in 
marriage to Robert McNaughton 
Spraggs of Hythe, the ceremony be- 
ine performed by the Rev. A. Willis 

nn. 


DANCE AT BEZANSON HALL 
ON EVENING OF NOV. 11TH 


BEZANSON, Nov. 2.—Miss Smith 
of the Somme school is putting on a 
Bingo Dance at the Bezanson Com- 
munity Hall on Friday night, Novem- 
ber 11 (Remembrance Day), in aid 
of the school’s Christmas fund. A 
first-class orchestra has been en- 
gaged for the occasion. Everybod 
welcome and a good time is assured. 


MEETING OF A. T.A. SATURDAY 

A meeting of Grande Prairie A.T.A. 
Local will be held Saturday, Novem- 
ber 5, in Grande Prairie High School, 
commencing at 2:30 p.m. Members 
are urged to be present. 


_..don’t trifle with 


COLDS! 


Break them up over-night | 


wih ASCO 


ASCO wonderfui ior stopping Headaches 
too. Diken't drug. dope or deaden- -but soothes 
pains. ASCO contains ev 

scientific oain-sooth r ans 


SXF Ee modern 
in-removing ingredient Nc 8 
Rabit : forming drugs 
Crestee no 
craving, ligest:ve 
unrest or constipation 
rE bv ? fi- 
cians. Every ts 
ASCO. Rea 
white and bine box. All 
druggists. as 


Recommended and sold by 
BUTCHART’S DORUG SsTORE 
Grande Prairie, Alta. 


UPSWEPT HAIR STYLE BRINGS ON WAVE OF TINY HATS 


. Whether upswept hair styles brought on a wave of tiny hats or vice versa remains a mystery, but 
tiny hats are the fashionable thing. In the photos above Francine Bordeaux wears a little hat perched 


over her right eye. 


It is a felt tricorne with a bit of ostrich feather for accent. 
in the smartest of country tweeds, and her miniature hat matches its bold check exactly. 


Whelan chooses a French felt hat. 


| This Week’s Recipe | | 


SUNDAY SUPPER SPECIAL 
A Hearty Dish For the Whole Family 


All the tang of open boats, and the 


WINTERING ROSES 


(Experimental Farms News) 


At this time of the year 
thoughts of rose growers turn to the 


| winter protection of their plants. All 


salt spray running high is transported /to9 often vigorous plants of great 


to your own home with this delicious 
and popular Seashore Chowder. Serve 
it in generous bowls with sweet pickles 
and follow with sliced tomatoes. It's 
a supper that sticks to your ribs, and 
appeal to young and old alike. 


Seashore Chowder 
1 slice fat salt pork 
1 large or 2 medium-sized onioas 
2 cups diced raw potatoes 
1% pounds Canadian halibut 
2 cups of milk 
2 tablespoons butter 
Salt and pepper to taste 
Fry out the salt pork, remove the 
crackles, and cook the onion gently for 
five minutes. Cook the potatoes in 
boiling water until almost done, add 
the fish, cut in pieces, and cook until 
the fish is done. Remove any skin 
and bones. Add the onion, milk, but- 
ter and heat, but do not boil. Roll 
soda biscuits and place in tureen, pour 
the chowder on top and serve at once 
This Seashore Chowder makes Sun- 
day supper an easy meal, and is par- 
ticularly good when the midday meal 
has been substantial. A colorful des- 
sert, using one of the flavored gele 
tine powders, and whipping when tt 
begins to set, tops off the meal nicely. 
Try it this Sunday and see how well 
your family like it Canned Canadian 
chicken haddie may be used where the 
fresh fish is not available. 
Worth remembering too is the fact 
that the Canadian market now offers 
excellent chowders in canned form. 


CARD OF THANKS 
We wish to thank all of our many 
friends and neighbors who have been 
so kind and helpful and also for the 
many beautiful floral tributes during 
our recent sad bereavement. 
Rupert Carveth and Baby Jean. 


CARD OF THANKS 
A. Smart and family wish to thank 
all their friends and neighbors for 
their kindness and expressions of 
sympathy in their sad reavement 


in the loss of wife and mother. 


KEEP YOUR FEET DRY WITH A 
PAIR OF DOMINION RUBBERS 


Men’s Low Rubbers.. 


Spat Clog Rubbers, per pair . 
Ankle Top Shoe Rubbers, 


No buckles or snaps at 


For work we have 6-hole lace 
Rubbers at the low price of . 


Children’s 4-hole lace Rubbers 


Boys’ 5-hole lace rolled 


Ladies’ Low Rubbers, per pair 


— 


Men’s 


90c and $1.10 
. $1.25 
_ $2.50 
$1.95 
- $1.30 
- $1.50 

70c 


edge . 


Black Knee Boots 


Per Pair 


Where You Get QUALITY at LOWES] PRICES 


Phone 40 --- We Deliver 


Grande Prairie 


|promise die from exposure to the 
winter conditions that prevail in this 
northern latitude, states R. G. White, 
Student Assistant, Dominion Experi- 
mental Station, Fredericton, N.B. 
Undoubtedly the primary requisite 


for good wintering is to have well | 


ripened bushes before cold weather 
sets in. In a dry year this usually 
occurs automatically, 
advances A wet year, however, may 
prolong growth to the danger point. 
Over such conditions the gardener 
has no control, but fertilization and 
cultivation should be so timed as to 
induce proper ripening of the cur- 
rent season’s wood. Recent informa- 
tion seems to indicate that well- 
{nourished plants winter Letter than 


{starved ones, provided good maturity | 


|of the wood is obtained. 

Roses have been grown at the 
|Fredericton Experimental Station for 
jover fifteen years. During that time 
|some losses have been sustained, bu 


| At the Churches | 


as the season | 


Una Merkel steps out 
Arleen 


in general the plants have wintered 
well. In discussing protection ‘one 
must bear in mind that killing occurs 


the |more from drying winds and alter- reach the 


|nate periods of freezing and thawing, 
ithan from actual cold. Thus, the 
{growing parts should have a cover- 
ing that will protect those areas from 
{such conditions. Rugosas and poly- 
jantha roses are hardy, but the hybrid 
|petuals and hybrid teas must have 
|protection. At one time the roses at 
the Station were wintered by trench- 
\ing the plants deep in the ground. 
They wintered quite well, but the 
work involved proved too great, so 
{this method was abandoned for the 
lequally effective, yet much simpler 
{method of mounding up. Just before 
the ground freezes the stems are tied 
loosely together to prevent the snow 
from breaking them down, and the 
bushes are then mounded with earth 
to a height of from eight to twelve 
jinches. This earth is taken from be- 
tween the plants. No _ additional 
covering is given unless the bed is 
manured. The practice is not to 
prune any of the bushes in the 
autumn, as this might cause the ex- 
posed tissue to dry. out. In this way 
the roses winter quite well—last win- 
ter not a plant died. During a year 
with a light fall of snow, as occurred 
in 1936, the loss runs up consider- 
ably. A precaution against light 
snowfall would be to use additional 


THE NORTHERN TRIBUNE 


|M.P.H.A.Broadcast 
Over CFGP For 
This Week 


By W. D. Albright 
Good evening, friends. 


Substituting for the publicity 
director, who under instructions 
from the finance committee of the 


|Monkman Pass Highway Association 
}left Edmonton on Monday for Prince 
George, I have the privilege of 


'bringing you some interesting news. | 


Most of you are already aware 
that after dismissing his packers and 
losing several helpers Francis 
Murphy, in charge of the crew put- 
ting through the pathfinder car, 
footed it to Hansard to obtain a team 
and supplies, intending to single-file 
|the horses through the bush. The car 
{had been left on a hill in the Pass 
'2'%6 miles beyond Monkman Lake. 
Unable to proceed without assistance, 
| Charles and Jerry Stojan came out to 
Grande Prairie. 

On Monday, October 
jand Louis Stojan, 
Alex. Watt, Bruce Albright, 
Moore and Pete Unger left Beaver 
{Lodge in aé_ truck, picking up at 
|Callihoo's place Neil McLachlan with 
two teams, two wagons and supplies. 
'MeLachlan and Unger returned 
presently from McTavish's camp 
with the spare team. Along the trail 
the others picked up Everett Wedell, 
on his way in. 

Camping one night just beyond the 
ear, the teamsters met four of 
Murphy's men returning from the 
road camp. They reported that their 
leader had left ten days previously 
and they knew not whether he was 
dead or alive. Grubstake had run 
down to flour and a few onions, 
without baking powder to make ban- 
nock of the flour. They decided to 
|break camp. 
| Norman Underwood had _ accom- 
;}panied Murphy to Hansard, Downing 
land Vick set out on Murphy’s track 
lthrough the bush. _ Sanderson and 
Russell were preparing to raft down 
the McGregor. Millsap, Larson, Bert 
and Bill Underwood decided it would 
cost the Association less money if 
| they returned home through the 
| Pass. 

With the pathfinder car seemingly 
abandoned, the road camp broken 
up, a little more bush trail to cut to 
McGregor, with no forage 
for the horses and. with the ground 
soft in spots, Alex. Watt decided to 
send Louis Stojan back with the 
team while his own party pressed on 
to Hobi’s afoot. On Thursday, 27th, 
|the hiking party reached the road 
camp, where they met Mr. Murphy, 
who had returned from Hansard with 
ja team, oats, baled hay, provisions 
jand the five men of his party who 
had gone west. Next day Alex. and 
Bruce walked 40 miles back to Mc- 
Tavish’s to inform the eastbound 
party of the news and to send a 
}message to the superintendent, Albert 
Smith. Saturday morning they re- 
turned west packing a hundred 
|pounds apiece. 
| Yesterday. at Beaver Lodge I saw 
ithe returned members of Murphy’s 
crew. They paid high tribute to him 
and believed that with the nine men 
he now had and a team to help, he 
should get the car to the McGregor. 
| Most of the four remaining miles of 


National Cheese 


17, Charlie 


Guy 


accompanied by | 


We were as 
get the car 


following the sandbars. 
anxious as you to 
through,” said one. 


drove us out.” They did not look 
over-fed, 
Last mail brought a letter from 


Lorne Lyle, at Aleza Lake, dated 
October 27, stating that Murphy had 
left Hansard on the 20th with the 
jteam, while Hanson had gone up to 
| Hobi’s cabin with a big boat to bring 
the car down the McGregor and the 
Fraser to a point where it could be 


put on the Yellowhead road on its 
way to Vancouver. 
Martin Caine wrote from Prince 


|George on October 25 telling of plans 
for a reception there. May the guest: 


arrive! 

Acknowledgments 

The finance committee acknowl- 
edges CFGP dance returns § from 
jthree more points, viz.: 

| High Prairie $56.40 

Crystal Creek 5.60 

Stewart and Webberville 4.70 

$66.70 

South Dawson enquires about it 
remittance to Mrs. Dumont. This 
thas not yet been received by the 
treasurer and the rule is to acknow!l- 
edge only what passes through hi 
hands. In due time separate ack 
nowledgement will be made of all 
contributions. Receipts are still 
awaited from several points in the 
Block and elsewhere. 

The fame of the effort is spread- 
ing. A few weeks ago a ten-dollar 
cheque was received from Dr. Wm 
S. Keith, Toronto. Comes now a 
|cheque for $5 from G. Gordon Keith, 
also of Toronto. Then there is $25 
from W. I. Monkman of Nanton, 
Alberta; $50 from John Corrigan, 
Elmworth, and $13 from J. H. Webber 
from radio raffle at Sexsmith. 

Acknowledgment is made to Leon- 
ard Konshalk, who lent his team, one 


member of which reached the Her- 
rick. 

We understand a Hallowe'en dance 
in aid of the fund has been held at 
Faust. Scheduled for tonight at 
South Dawson is a picture show put 
on by F. G. Fawkes, who will also 
be at Montney on the third, Fort St. 
John on the fourth and Sweetwater 
on the fifth. A silver collection at 
each point. Mr. Fawkes sends greet- 
ings to Mr. and Mrs. Melville Young 
at Sunset Prairie, hoping to see them 
at Sweetwater on Saturday night. 

History is making, friends, but 
more money is needed to pay the 
men. They have done yeoman 
service, We wish to spare them a 
dollar a day. Let the world know 
we are on the job. 

Good night in a good cause. 


MARKING STIRRING EVENTS IN 
THE HISTORY OF CANADA 


More than 250 monuments and tat 
lets have been erected throughout 
Canada during the past 16) yenrs to 
mark points of historic interest which 
have been declared by the Histori 
sites and Monuments Board of Canad 


as being of 
portance 
An honorary advisory board, — the 
Historic Sites and Monuments Loard 
composed of recornized historians, co 


outstanding national im 


operates with the National Parks Bu 
reau and the Department of Mines and 
Resources in the marking and preset 
vation of historic sites, and from the 
Atlantic to the Pacific stirring events 
in the history of Canada are recalled 
by tablets and monuments erected b 


the government 


Week Nov. 7-12 


National Cheese Week, which will 
be held this year from November 7 


covering in the form of evergreen|to November 12, inclusive, was in- 
boughs, or leaves to protect the/augurated by the Dairy Industry of 
‘plants and hold the snow, these to|;Canada for the purpose of calling 


FORBES PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH be put on after the ground freezes. |attention to the advantages of cheese 


REV. C. B. FISHER 
Phone 174 


Sunday, November 6 
11:00 a.m.—Sabbath School. 
3:00 p.m.—Flying Shot. 
7:30 p.m.—Evening Service. 


CHRIST CHURCH (ANGLICAN) 
Grande Prairie 
REV. T. D. JONES, Rector 

Sunday, November 6—Trinity 21st 

9:00 a.m.—Holy Communion. 
11:00 a.m.—Matins. 

12:30 p.m.—Sunday School. 

7:30 p.m.-—Evensong. 
will 


A. Bazaar be held in the 


Hall. 


ST. JOSEPH’S CHURCH 
Grande Prairie 
Sunday, November 6 
Father McGuire— 
Masses .... 9:00 and 11:00 a.m. 
Perpetual Help Devotions 7:30 p.m. 
Father Doyle— 


IS inns 4 00 4 6 0.008: 9:00 a.m. 

Buffalo Lakes ........ 11:00 a.m. 
Father Redmond— 

Beaver Lodge . 11:00 a.m. 

Rio Grande 12:00 noon 


ST. PAUL'S UNITED CHURCH 
Grande Prairie 
Minister 
REV. A. WILLIS CANN 
.H. L. Vaughan, A.E.T.C.M., Organist 
Sunday, November 6 
11:00 a.m.—Morning Worship. 
12:15 p.m.—Sunday School. 
7:30 p.m.—Evening Worship. 
CLAIRMOUNT UNITEO CHURCH 
2:00 p.m.—Sunday School. 
3:00 p.m.—Church Service. 
Conducted by Rev. A. Willis Cann 
A welcome to all. 


CHRISTIAN SCIENCE 
At all Christian 


east of the garden of Eden Cherubims, 


tree of life.” 
ges trom 


Baker Eddy, is: “Radiant with merc 
and justice, the sword of Tru 
distance between Truth and error, 


the unreal and the real” (p. 538). 


On Saturday, Nov. 5, the annual W. 
Speke | 


Science churches 


quotations contained in the Lesson- with industrial uses 
Sermon is Genesis 3:24, “So he drove emg . 
out the man; and he placed at the 


and a flaming sword which turned 
every way, to keep the way of the 


eams afar and indicates the infinite 


between the material and spiritual,— 


!Soggy materials should be avoided, 
jas they tend to blacken and rot the 
, wood. 

| Although climbers are not grown 
‘at the Station, they may be protected 
iby removing them from their trel- 
'lises, coiling them up carefully to 
|prevent any breakage and covering 
ithem completely with six inches or 
|so of earth. Additional covering of 
|/boughs or dry leaves may be given 
\if desired. Some growers simply lay 
ithe canes down and build a wooden 
box around them, filling the box 
|with dry hardwood leaves. The box 
ishould have a leak-proof cover to 
keep out the water. Roses so 
wintered should have the covering 
jremoved gradually so as not to ex- 
pose the stems suddenly to the 
changeable periods of sunshine and 
cool spells that occur in the spring. 
|Lessening the covering as_ spring 
lapproaches is advisable as a_ circu- 
llation of air is provided that is good 
'for the plants. 

Tree roses should have their roots 
/loosened on one side, and the whole 
plant laid down and covered wit 
earth, being sure the root is well 


covered. 

| These simple methods’ should 

prove satisfactory under ordinary 

northern conditions, with the result 

that anyone growing roses can look 

forward to a good bloom the follow- 

jing year. 

SILVER-COATED CONTAINERS 
FOR FOOD POSSIBILITY IN 


THE VERY NEAR FUTURE 


Consumers some day may be able to 
| buy their soup and succotash in silver 
linstead of tin cans, if experiments re- 
; vealed at tie international Hlectro 
chemical Society meeting prove practi 


cal Silver-coated food containers 
were just one of the possibilities sus- 
gested for the metal, Dr. Lawrence 
Addicks of Bel Air, Md., told the elec- 


trochemists that when the government 


next Sunday the subject of the/ «stops supporting the market by buying 
Lesson-Sermon will be “Adam and] more silver than it needs, scientists are 
Fallen Man.” One of the Scriptural]! going to have to take up the slack 


London Magis 
ears is the most 
hitting anyone.” 


According to one 
irate, “Boxing the 
dangerous way of 


DN 
Mercury must be present in an alloy 


Cee ot Se eee before it can be called an amalgam, 
with Key to the Scriptures,” by Mary 


Ore croe ee — oe eee eeorece 


FOR NEWS — READ THE 
TRIBUNE 
When there is a_ better 


newspaper in Grande Prairie 
it will still be The Tribune. 


eeewoceceerec oer ec ee eomoroewe 


icKSs 
VaeoRus 


as an item of food and to give in- 


formation about the many appetizing | 
ways of serving this excellent food | 
Besides being a valuable | 


product. 


and economical food, cheese has a 


peculiar interest to Canadians, be- | 


cause there are many thousands of 
farmers in Canada producing milk 
for market and the manufacture of 
cheese utilizes about seven per cent 
of this production. 

Cheese is a concentrated form of 
milk, because one pound of cheese 
represents one gallon (about 10 
pounds) of milk. Cheese is thus 


|the best muscle 
for girls and boys. Although Cana- 
dians eat the least cheese of any of 
the principal nations, less than four 
pounds per head of population, no 
jless than about 17 per cent of the 
total population of Canada is directly 
|dependent on the dairy industry for 
a living, and Canadian cheese is 
famous all the world over as a 
product second to none. The: high 
position of the dairy industry with 
its cheese makers may be gauged 
|from the tact that the value of Cana- 
|dian dairy produce in 1937 was more 
jthan $228,000,000, 

| Cheese is also a convenient com- 
modity in the home, and its proper 
storage does not present a difficult 
problem. The majority of persons 
who live near a grocery store buy 
i}cheese in rather small quantities, so 
} that really there is no _ storage 
problem. Larger quantities are just 
as easy to keep. If a whole small 
cheese, or a part of a large cheese, is 
bought to be stored in the home, care 
should be taken to prevent drying- 
out or the development of mould. A 
good plan is to cut a small portion 
from the cheese for immediate or 
near-future use and cover the cut 
surface of the cheese to be stored 
‘with a coating of paraffin 
applying the melted wax with a 
brush. When stored in a cool, ven- 
tilated, dry place, cheese so treated 
will keep in perfect condition for 
some considerable time. 
cut for immediate use should be 
covered and kept in a cool dry place. 
When this portion is consumed an- 
other portion may be cut, and the 
operation repeated until the perfectly 
conditioned cheese is used up. 

It is universally recognized that 
Canadian Cheddar cheese is the 
\finest made anywhere. 

- 


When cold weather comes healthy 
appetites automatically seem to re- 
Why not satisfy 


| 
| RECIPES FOR CHEESE WEEK 
i 


iquire warm foods. 
ithis natural desire by serving an 
feating cheese? 

Cheese may, of course, be used as 
it is purchased, but in this form it 
does not provide the pleasing sense 
of warmth to the taste, althugh its 
high fat content makes it an excel- 
lent heat producer in the body. This 
valuable dairy product, however, 
changes from a cold tosa hot food 
when combined with other foods 
such as eggs, milk and cereals, to 
produce a tempting cheese souffle or 
‘something similar. 

The wise homemaker will depend 
jupon savory, appetizing cheese dishes 
‘to solve the luncheon or supper 
;problem many times during the com- 


rich in fat and protein, arid is one of | 
and body builders | 


wax, | 


The portion | 


ing months of cold weather, and will 
jconstantly use such recipes as the 
folowing which have been selected 
\from Dominion Department of Agri- 
culture publication 586, “Cheese for 
|Better Meals”: 
Cheese Souffle 

tablespoons butter 
tablespoons flour 
cup milk 
teaspoon salt 
cup cheese, grated 
Yolks of 3 eggs 
Whites of 3 eggs 
Few grains of cayenne 
Pinch of mustard 

Melt butter. Blend in flour. Add 
seasonings and milk. Stir until sauce 
has thickened. Add cheese. Add 
| beaten egg yolks and, when mixture 
is cold, fold in stiffly beaten egg 
whites. Pour into buttered baking 
{dish or ramekins and bake in a 
moderately slow oven (325 to 350 de- 
grees F.) until firm — 30 to 40 
minutes. Serve at once. 


Sk aw 


Cheese En Casserole 


4 tablespoons butter 

4 tablespoons flour 

2 cups milk 

4 cups cooked spaghetti, macaroni o1 
rice or 


4 hard cooked eggs and 2 cups spa- 
ghetti, potatoes, celery, corn, peas | 2 
or spinach or 

4 cups cooked vegetables cauli- 
flower, cabbage, potatoes, corn, | 
spinach, asparagus, peas or 

2 cups spaghetti and 2 cups celery 
corn, cabbage or peas 

1 cup grated cheese 
Salt and pepper 

| Buttered crumbs 
| Make a cream sauce of butter 
| flour, seasonings and milk When 
cooked, add grated cheese Place 
alternate layers of spaghetti, ete., and 
cheese sauce in a buttered baking 
ldish. Cover with crumbs and brown 
in a hot oven (400 degrees FE.) 

| Cheese Roast 

\2 cups cooked kidney or navy beans 

2 cups grated cheese 

Y% cup finely diced celery 

}1 teaspoon minced parsley 

jl egg slightly beaten 

2 cups soft stale bread crumbs 

2 tablespoons butter 
Salt and pepper 
Drain beans, mash with fork and 

ladd with celery and parsley to 


ind mix thoroughly. 


|cheese. Add eggs 
icepan, Add crumbs, 


|Melt butter in si 


}mixing well and cooking until 
slightly browned. Add to cheese 
mixture until stiff enough to shape 
into a loaf. Roll in remaining 
jcrumbs. Bake in a moderate oven 
juntil heated through and nicely 
' browned. Serve hot with tomato 
sauce. Small onion finely chopped 


‘or grated may be added if desired. 


¥ | Corn and Cheese Casserole 


| 
jl cup corn 


1 cup bread or cracker crumbs 

1 cup grated cheese 

le teaspoon salt 

2 cups scalded milk 

1 tablespoon melted butter 

| 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 

2 tablespoons chopped green pepper 
| or pimento 
2 egus 

| Combine all ingredients except 
‘eggs and milk. Beat egg yolks and 
ladd with milk. Fold in stiffly beaten 
‘eau whites. Place in a buttered bak~- 
ling dish and oven-poach in a mod- 
erate oven (350 degrees F.) until 
firm-—about 40 minutes, 


|/bush could be avoided, they said, by | 


“Food shortage | 


PAGE SEVEN 


BOOST B.C. BOND HOLDING 1,500% 
| VICTORIA, Oct. 27 life Insurance 
companies had increased their hold 
| ings of ELC. bonds 1.500 during the 
| past year, W. T. Straith said as he 
jmoved the address in reply to the 
|apeech from the throne in the provin- 


cial legislature Wednesday 
It was an indication of the prov 
ince’s enhanced credit brought about 


by meeting maturities 
enald the 


as they fell due 
Liberal member for Vietorla 


- CLASSIFIED 


Firat insertion, 2 cent* per word; each 
consecutive insertion, | cent per word. 
Minimum total! charge 25 centa 
Ten cents extra is charged for 
box numbers 


FOR SALE Piano in good condition, 
S125 Box 3, Tribune itt 
FOR SALE. -Five-roomed house, cood 
garden, we!l sheltered and water 
Box 3. T vine Hittin 
WANTED lo buy eral milk cows 
fresh oo freshening oon Apply 
P.O. Box 1858, Grande Prairt litt 
FOR SALE sweet clover bundles, 
2c¢ each \lso veet clover seed, 
k 4 Brewer Elmworth P. O 
Phone 6p-24 
FOR SALE House and lot with 
electric light, $250 cash. Also new 


kitchen cabinet, couch, baby 


cribs, dresser, bed complete, elec- 
tric washer, Northern Electric 
radio Cheap for immediate sale 
Apply Sexsmith Trading Store, 
Sexsmith. 2c-20 
FOR SALE—Complete set of orches- 
tral drums and traps, good as new. 
$40; value $75. A Jorgensen, 
phone Sexsmith R120. 2p-20 
FOR SALE jaby carriage, in good 
condition, $8 cash. mee, -d. & 
Rickerby, Wembley. 4p-22 
FOR SALE Registered Tamworth 
boar, 2% years. 4red by U. of A. 
$30 Il. C. Guest, Hinton = Trail, 
Alberta. lp-20 
LOST—Black mare (aged), 1400. 
Finder notify S. J. Halwa, Clair- 
mont. Reward. 3p-21 
TO RENT~-Five-roomed house, hot 
water heating system, garage. 
Appiy Mrs. K. Lydell, Grande 
Prairie. lp-20 
WILL BE in Grande Prairie deliver- 
ing some choice mink on Friday 
and Saturday. Anyone interested 
in purchasing the real goods see 
me at the Donald Hotel. Write to 
Box 5, Tribune. W. C. Moraw. 
2c-21 
NOTICE 
A meeting of the trustees of the 
Grande Prairie U.F.A, Co-op. will be 
held at the Donald Hotel, Tuesday, 
November 8, at 2 p.m. Election of 
_oltfieers and general business. 
1e20 W. R. ROBERTS, Secretary. 


LTS EE TE 


| A. R. CARTER, Optometrist 


of Edmonton, will make his 

next regular visit to Rycroft, 

Monday, November 7, until 

noon; Spirit River, Monday } 

afternoon, November 7; Pouce | 
| Coupe, Wednesday, November 


9; Dawson Creek Hotel, Thurs- 
| day, November 10; Hythe, Fri- 


if! day, November 11; Beaver | 


Lodge Hotel, Saturday, Novem- 


| ber 12; Sexsmith Drug Store, 
| Monday, November 14. 2c-20 
Department of Municipal Affairs 
Public Noti 
T. M. NEWTON will be at 
LYMBURN Noy, Sta 
SHXSMITH Nov. 10th 
HYTHE Noy th 
BEAN ER LobGtit Nov. 18th 
| ences 
Town of Grande Prairie 


Notice is hereby given, that under 
j}the provisions of The Tax Recovery 
i} Act, 1938, the Town of Grande 
Praivie will offer for sale, by public 

uction at the office of the Secretary- 
Treasurer, Grande Prairie, Alberta, 
on Wednesday, November 16th, 1938, 


at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, the 
following lands: 
Lot Block Plan No. 
26 and 27 1 1410AC 
| 20 5 ™ 
}29 and 30 5 “ 
}29 and 30 8 sa 
25 to 27 (inel.) 11 
16 12 
l and 2 13 % 
1 23 1061AE 
28 25 7 
\6 and 7 32 
6 32 he 
17 and 18 33 8315AK 
1/13, 14, 15 
i?5 to 28 (incl.) 35 
137 and 38 35 ? 
7 and 18 48 " 
1/6 and 7 50 . 
;}12 to 14 (inel,) 53 
13 and 14 56 “ 
}2 8 2032BQ 
|6 and 7 3 7517BP 
Fach pareel will be offered for sale 
jsubject to the approval of the 
|Minister of Municipal Affairs, and 
ubject to a reserve bid and to the 
reservations contained in the exist- 
ing certificates of title 
rerms, cash. 
Redemption may be effected by 
payment of all arrears of taxes and 


costs, at any time prior to the sale, 
Dated at Grande Prairie, Alberta, 
this 21st day of September, 1938. 
ROBT. KEYS, 
Secretary~-Treasurer. 


I 


oor 7 oe 1 we w ow om 


Violin Lessons 


Anyone interested in taking 
Violin lessons make make ap 
polntments with Hrie Dalen, 
who will be at the Spencer 
Block, Crande Prairie every 
Saturday, Kor further infor- 
mation, write to Box 1722 at 
Grande Prairie, Alberta, 


errr er ef eo wee om oe www owe we ooo 


J. A. Toombs 


Grande Prairie, Alberta 


GLASSES 


OPTOMETRIST L OPTICIAN 


THE CORRECTION OF 
VISUAL OEFECTS 


—————_——— SS 


Personal Interest 


Jack Dirom of Clairmont district 
left for Edmonton W 
ning on a business trip. 
accompanied by Miss Margaret. 
Dickson, who will resume her duties 
as nurse at the Royal Alexandra 
Hospital, and also by Mrs. Leslie | 
Dickson. . 


D. J. Macdonald, field supervisor | 
“for the Soldier Settlement, returned | 
to Grande Prairie on Friday last, | 
coming from Edmonton, where he| 
spent five weeks working out of the 
central office in the area east of the | 


Po 


city. 7s ee 


Frank Donald left on a business 
trip to Edmonton on Tuesday. 
e oe o 


Bill Reasbeck. Mayor of Dawson | 


Creek, was a passenger on Tuesday's 
train, en route home from a trip to 
Calgary and Edmonton. 
_ a o 
Fred Willman of the Wanham dis- 
trict was a visitor in Grande Prairie 
Wednesday. 


H. S. Day, district surveyor, and 
his assistant C. W. Lester, accom- 
panied by their cook, T. J. Starkey, 
spent a short time in Grande Prairie 
on Thursday en route from Teepee 
Creek to East of the Smoky. 


a e e 


Dr. T. Powell of Calgary, superin- 
tendent of missions for the United 
Church, was a passenger on Friday’s 
train, en route to the Block. 

*. 


R. M. Bickell of the DeBolt dis- 
trict, who was in the Grande Prairie 
Municipal Hospital for 22 days, left 
for home on Saturday. In conversa- 
tion with The Tribune reporter Mr. 
Bickell said that he has a bad leg 
that doesn’t know enough to behave 


itself. 


Arthur Sherman, well known fire 
ranger and trapper, was a week-end 
visitor to Grande Prairie. Arthur 
left on Tuesday for his trap lines 
southwest of here. 

eo 


A. Nordstrom, Rupert Perry and 
G. L. Craig. of the Beaver Lodge dis- 
trict, spent a few hours in Grande 
Prairie on Monday. 

_ a 

Jim Evans and daughter, Jessie, 
left on Tuesday’s train to spend a 
week at the Capitol City. 

- . e 

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jeffcoate, on 
Wednesday afternoon, at their home 
on Third Avenue North, a daughter. 


Mr. Romeo Pronovost and Mr. 
Sigurd Sorken of North  Kleskun 
were visitors in Grande Prairie on 
Monday. 


BORN AT MUNICIPAL HOSPITAL 


To Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Croken, 
Clairmont, October 27, a girl. 

To Mr. and Mrs. Fred Moon, Glen 
Lesie, October 30, a boy. 

To Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Ford, 
Grande Prairie, October 30, a boy. 

To Mr. and Mrs. Marion White, 
Sexsmith, October 30, a boy. 

To Mr. and Mrs. George Lathwell, 
Sexsmith, November 1, a boy. 


To Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. 
Kramps, Crooked Creek, November 
1, a boy. 

To Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Wood, 


Hythe, November 3, a boy. 


BORN AT BEAVER LODGE SUB- 
HOSPITAL 


To Mr. and Mrs. I. Balden of 
Beaver Lodge, October 12, a boy. 

To Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Party of 
Beaver Lodge, October 25, a girl. 

To Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Hommy, 
Hythe, October 28, a girl. 

To Mr. and Mrs. I. Roninoss, Hin- 
ton Trail, November 1, a boy. 

To Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Cox, Beaver 
Lodge, November 2, a girl. 


— 


IN 
SECOND- 
HAND 


Mach 


1—7 H.-P. 
1—2-FURROW DISC PLOW 
1—3'2x3 ADAMS WAGON 


1——18-RUN SINGLE DISC LHC. 
1—16x16 8-INCH DISC 


1—3-FURROW DISC PLOW 
tically New) 


Half Price 


be purchased at half price. 
repairs for their tractor. 


Phone 57 


lc 


BARGAINS 


1.H.C. STATIONARY ENGINE 
1—12-INCH BISSELL DISC (Like New) 
(Reconditioned ) 


1—24-RUN M.-H. SINGLE DISC DRILL (Snap at this Price) 150.00 
1—-18-36 HART-PARR TRACTOR 
1—21-INCH MASSEY-HARRIS DISC (Reconditioned) 
1—28-INCH 1.H.C. GANG PLOW (Like New) 

(Snap) 

1—28-INCH COCKSHUTT JEWEL GANG PLOW 


1—-CRANKSHAFT FOR 20-35 ALLIS-CHALMERS TRACTOR 
50 TRACTOR WHEEL LUGS—Suit any Tractor, 50¢ each to clear. 


We have also a supply of repairs for 18-36 Tractor which can 
A real apportunity for anyone requiring 


COCKSHUTT 


PLOW COMPANY 


SRG Ss 


HEIR EXPECTED 


Egypt has prepared a $15,000 
layette in expectation of an heir to 
the throne. If the new arrival is a 
son, he will be heir; but if a daugh- 
ter, the heir apparent will continue 
to be Prince Mohamed Aly, elderly 
cousin to King Farouk. Queen 
Farida is shown above. 


By the Gleaner 


(Continued from Page Seven) 


Mrs. E. Johnson of Wanham ar- 
rived in Grande Prairie on Saturday 
with a sick boy and is staying with 
Mrs. M. McKinney. 

Mrs. Doyle and her son Jack, who 
have been staying with Mrs. Doyle’s 
sister, Mrs. Mike Sheridan, for the 
past week, returned to their home in 
Munson, Alberta, by car on Monday. 


“oso oe 


The W.M.S. of St. Paul’s Church 
met on Wednesday afternoon at the 
home of Mrs. Kowensky. 

Miss Jessie Evans left for Edmon- 
ton by train on Tuesday. Mr. Evans 
accompanied her. 

Miss Olive Wishart, Miss Aileen 
Chard and Mr. Tanner Staples spent 
Saturday evening in Beaver Lodge. 
The Senior C.W.L. met at the home 

Mrs. F. Hickman on Wednesday 

Business over, their pastor, 
McGuire, after mentioning 
matters of import concerning the 
church, read a very interesting ac- 
count of the romance, and its tragic 
ending, of King Leopold of Belgium 
and the late Queen Astrid. A de- 
licious lunch—and the Night Hawks 
—ended a perfect evening perfectly. 

Mr. T. E. Cooke and his daughter, 
Eunice, returned on Friday after a 
week’s visit with relatives in Edmon- 
ton. 


of 
evening. 
Father 


Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cooke and 
Margaret Rose returned on Friday 
with Mr. T. E. Cooke, after visiting 
relatives and friends in Edmonton. 

The Grande Prairie Ladies Musical 
Club met this afternoon at the home 
of Mrs. R. Keys. 
| Mrs. Tosczak and baby daughter of 
Goodfare spent from Tuesday tll 
| Saturday with the former’s sister, 
y Sars. A. J. Barre of Grande Prairie. 


and Allen 
a simply 


A number of Joan 
harters’ friends had 


arm 
ery 


$ 75.00 
90.00 
30.00 
35.00 
80.00 
25.00 


@ 
DRILL 


(Rebuilt) 500.00 
125.00 
80.00 
65.00 


(Prac- 
100.00 


30.00 


GRANDE PRAIRIE, Alberta 


———_—____---J} 


Poppy 
Day On 


Sat., Nov. 5th 


The public are reminded 
that Saturday, November 5, 
is Poppy Day. Bright and 
early four young ladies will 
be on the streets of Grande 
Prairie, so have the change 
handy so as not to delay this 
energetic quartette. 

The money from the sale 
of poppies goes to the dis- 
abled veterans. 

In every town in the Peace 
River and all over Canada 
poppies will be sold on this 
date to assist those who were 
disabled on the battlefields 
of Europe in fighting for the 
principles of democracy. 


ooo ee 


©-© ©-0e-©-c.0°2-.e ©-o.2e.0-e.0-.0-e-.0-2 


> <2 2-2 «-e ©-2 ©: eS ©0622 s-o- oe 


----@ 


| hilarious time at a Hallowe'en party 


lat the Charters home on Monday 
l evening. 
| “--+-- 

J. E. Thomson had a few 


Mrs. 
| selene in to tea on Friday in honor 
lof Mrs. Deeton. 

Mr. Freebury, on receiving sudden 
inews of his mother’s serious illness, 
left for Edmonton on Tuesday eve- 
ning. During his absence Mrs. Mels- 
ness is teaching. 

Miss Beath and Mrs. H. Newton 
visited the McNaughts of Beaver 
Lodge on Wednesday of last week. 

Miss Mary Bayhen is visiting rela- 
tives at Fairview this week. 

hir. and Mrs. Alex. Campbell left 
for Edmonton on Friday’s train. Mrs. 
Beeton expects to leave here next 
week. 


Christ Church A.Y.P.A. had a hard 
time party in the Speke Hall on 
Wednesday evening. It sure looked 
like pretty bad times, judging by 
their clothes, but there wasn't any- 
thing poor about the “eats.” The 


guests must have ransacked the 
“Comfort Corners” and Central Re- 
lief trunks to have obtained such 


astonishing results. However, they 
all had a good time in spite of their 
rags and tatters. 

The small tots celebrated Hallow- 
e’en with parties in their form rooms 
on Monday afternoon at Montrose 
School, but from Grade V up they 
had their “dress-up” party at night, 
with prizes and games and lots of 
fun. The High School students had 
a dance and games and “sucker” 
prizes that night too. Judging by 
hearsay. everyone had a jolly time. 

Mrs. Walker and her daughter, 
Doris, of Beaver Lodge had a look 
around their one-time stamping 
grounds in Grande Praire on Satur- 
day, after visiting Peace River. 

The teachers and officers of St. 
Paul's United Church held their 
monthly meeting at the Manse on 
Wednesday evening. 


Big Attendance At 


C.G.1.T. Rally At 
Beaver Lodge 


Seven carloads of Christ Church 
and St. Paul’s Church C.G.LT. mem- 
bers were taken to Beaver Lodge on 
Saturday to join in the rally there. 
The Beaver Lodge groups had drawn 
up a program of good fun and pro- 
vided a grand lunch for their guests. 
A hundred and sixty-two girls were 
present, representatives from various 
districts from Spirit River to Pouce 
Coupe. 

Games were led by Kay Smith of 
Beaver Lodge and the sing-song by 
Miss Jean Huston of Grande Prairie. 

There were ten very interesting 
discussion groups, each one report- 
ing its findings to the rest after 
supper. 

As a part 
Beaver 
ably 


of the program the 
Lodge C.G.1.T. group very 
gave a demonstration of their 


THE NORTHERN TRIBUNE. 
\the daughters and three of the sons. 


What about the fourth son and the 
fourth daughter, Miss Ada? They 
were right there, observing the cere- 
mony and later waiting upen table at 
the wedding supper; took our jokes 
and enquiries in good part, and 
though Sam and his house are ready 
and waiting, we didn’t learn just 
when we will be asked to listen to 
the preacher tell us our duty to God, 
our neighbors and society in 
and witness another happy event. 
Saskatchewan and Nussel, 
tcba, papers please copy. 


66 o 22 . 99 
Bolivia 
—~— (Continued from Page One) -— 


000,000 pounds sterling during the 
past 40 years. The country also out- 
strips any other country in the pro- 
duction of tin and bismuth. 

La Paz, the capital, has the highest 
18-hole golf course in the world. 

Continuing, the speaker observed 
that history takes us back only to 
1185, but behind that centuries of 
high civilization lie, antedating the 
Inca dynasty by hundreds of years. 


Finally the Spaniards settled in the 


country and exploited the natives. 
Today Spaniards rule the country, 
with a dictator form of government. 

Bolivia and Paraguay are the only 
two inland republics in South 
America. Chile snatched Bolivia's 
coast line, but recently Bolivia was 
granted a corridor leading from the 
river Parana to the Plata, and then 


‘to the sea. 


‘that Sucre is the 


opening ceremony and business ses- | 


sion of a regular weekly meeting. 
Fine talks were given by the girls 
from various towns, telling what they 


believed the C.G.1.T. purpose should 


mean to girls. 
Just before supper the members 
joyed a hilarious “Scavenger 


Mrs. A. Willis Cann gave a helpful 
paper for the leaders who attended 
the rally, and this was followed by 


) eme of the rally was “In 
ning for Peace.” This was car- 
ducted by 
Singing 
conclusion a 
joyable rally. 


Wire 


Mrs. W. T. M. Fowler. 
of “Taps” brought to a 
very successful and en- 


o—- ceo 


ete: J 
| { WESTVALE NEWS } 
@--— 

DOUBLE WEDDING—AND THEN 

SOME 

WESTVALE, Oct. 31.—In the fall 
of 1937 Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mumby 
came frorm Saskatchewan, bought 
and made their home on the Nels Lee 
farm. Two daughters accompanied 
them, and two more joined the family 
last summer. 

The rapid growth of four new 
houses in the district, and the equip- 
ment of the same, anticipating a 
change of residence by four brothers. 
has caused many a smile, joke and 
enquiry as to when it was going to 
happen. 

The Rev. Robert E. Parlee, who 
had done twelve years pastoral work 
in northern Saskatchewan, had 
joined his parents and family here 
and built a new home, which we call 
the parsonage. He wedded the eldest, 
Miss Edith Mumby, at Spirit River 
last summer, and on Saturday after- 
noon, the 29th inst., at 4 p.m., there 
gathered at the parsonage some 
|friends and relatives, beside the con- 
| tracting parties. The double wedding 
;then_ took place of David A. Parlee 
to Eva Mumby and Thomas A. 
Parlee to Edna Mumby, twin daugh- 
| ters of Mr. and Mrs. E. Mumby, to 
two more of the sons of Mr. and Mrs. 
| Wm. N. Parlee, the eldest brother, 
| Robert, the inister officiating. It 
he as a solemn yet very happy event. 
Then the party of twenty went to 
| the Mumby home and enjoyed a 
| wedding supper, a pleasant evening 
and some kisses; giving in return 
| warm handshakes and best wishes 
a ae and happy years. 

Vell! 


eee 


the vesper service, con- ‘ 


Describing the country, Mrs. Mac- 
Beth said that the country was a 
blaze of color in flowers and richly 
plumaged birds. In the 


Indians wear costumes made frain 
llama and alpaca wool woven by 
hand. 


The speaker then briefly referred 


to the native’s habit of oo 
coca (not cocoa). Coca, exp 

Mrs. MacBeth, is extensively grown. 
When mixed with potash it makes a 


natural cocaine in the mouth. In- q 


dians drink chicha, a beverage made 
by pulverizing grain into a mash and 
allowing it to ferment. It is very 
potent, declared the speaker. 

Most of the strangers, and many 
natives from the lowlands, suffer 
from soroche, an altitude sickness 
for which garlic is said to be a 
remedy. It is eaten raw and taken 
in pill form. 

Turning again to the description of 
the country, Mrs. MacBeth stated 
that the Bolivia plateau is the long- 
est. highest and widest in the world. 

In the highlands cattle are seldom 
seen. Here the chief animal is the 
llama, which provides meat, milk, 
wool, and draws supplies. Like its 
cousin the camel, the llama has no 
affection for its master. It carries 
a load of 100 pounds and walks 15 
miles a day if necessary. Many well- 
to-do city dwellers use llama dung 
for fuel. The newest apartment 
buildings are electrically equipped. 
There is no heating except from one 
small grate, yet it freezes nearly 
every night in the highlands, sum- 
mer and winter. 

The speaker went on to explain 


Bolivia. The President lives at 
La Paz, which is the seat of govern- 
ment. The city has 200,000 people, 
but has no mail boxes and no post- 
men. One must go to the post office, 
there being no substations, to post 
and collect mail, also to buy stamps, 
a day’s job for most people. 

Owing to altitude, observed the 
speaker, water takes a long time to 
boil and cpen wounds a long time to 
heal, and imsect bites develop into 
unpleasant sores—and there are a 
good many insects everywhere. 

The majority of the Indians are 


surly and suspicious, and are the 
most accomplished thieves in the 
world. Money is so scarce that a 


good deal of the business is done by 


barter. The standard of living is 
very low. 
Mrs. MacBeth took her audience 


on a side trip to Lima, capital of 
Peru, which is a magnificent city. 
Use of lantern slides added greatly 
to the most interesting lecture. 
In closing the speaker said: “White 
natives think Canada is a land of 
promise, where there is opportunity 


for all, a land in which there is no 7 


poverty and no I wish we 
could make their opinion of us come 


FGP Is 


(Continued from Page One) 


¥ 


country and northern British Colum- 
bia, I salute you! 

“If we have brought you some 
worthwhile entertainment and hel 
to make your lives happier during 
the past year, we have accompli 
something worthwhile. 

“And to our unseen sponsors —I 
want to thank you for the faith you 
‘eé put in us. May we merit it 
till further in the years that lie 
ahead. 

“Before I may I quote you a 
few lines? do not remember the 
name of the author, but they run like 


gc 
I 


So many gods—so many creeds, 
S Y ways that wind and 
When just the art of being kind 


Is all this sad world needs.’ 
“I wa to thank you all—all of 
you who have helped so generously 


ant 


to make this birthday party a suc-_ 


cess. 
“Thank you—everyone of you. 
Dest night, everyone, and good 
uck.” 


Canadian Legion’s Part in Program 

The Canadian Legion had a large 
spot on the program. J. W. Pickard 
opened this part of the evening's 
celebration with a few remarks ap- 
propriate to the occasion. 

President C. Turner, on behalf of 
the Legion offered congratulations 
to CFGP on its first birthday anni- 
versary. 

Dr. O’Brien in a short speech re- 
ferred to world conditions and the 
happy ending of the recent crisis 
which had threatened to become a 


world war. 

Songs were sung W. Storm, Dr. 
Carlisle and J. W. ckard. Lively 
choruses edded to the pleasure pro- 
vided by this delightful part of the 
evening's program. 

Many Short Speeches Given 

Short speeches were delivered by 
George Allford of Edmonton, a 
director of the Northern Broadcasting 
Company, operators of CFGP; W. 
Sharpe, M.L.A.; O. B. Harris, presi- 
dent of the Grande Prairie 
Trade; 1. Nelson, president of the 
Retail Merchants Association; Jim 
Jaeger, representing the resident 
travellers. 

The following musical numbers 


That accounts for three of|were interspersed among the various 


legal capital of, 


1 


THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 38, 1938 


“Rudy” Croken Of 
Clairmont On Mend 
From Car Accident 


Zhe many friends of “Rudy” Croken 
jwill be pleased to learn that he is 
'recovering from a car accident. 

| “Rudy” was on the way to Grande 
'Prairie from Clairmont on Friday 


He was picked up by “Curly” Pit- 
rushed to the Grande 


man and 
| Prairie Municipal Hospital, where an 
‘examination by Dr. O’Brien and Dr. 
Little revealed that his right arm 
;was broken and he was suffering 
'from body and head injuries. 

It is understood that “Rudy” will 
\be confined to the hospital for some 
time. 


Night Hawks 
(Are Away To 
‘Good Start 


; 


The Night Hawks, organized last 


year, have broadcast many clever 
|programs, but on Wednesday night 
they their best effort in 


their initial concert of the season. 

| The men composing the ned 

are giving of their time and its 
Christmas 


for the Cheer Fund, which 
will be distributed children 
'who would otherwise not visited 


by Santa Claus. 

| It takes an immense lot of work 
‘and time ng ag these original 
programs and the Night Hawks are 
eserving of every support in their 
fouew to build up a Christmas Cheer 


LATEST NEWS 
FLASHES 


“WILLING TO GUARANTEE WHAT 
1S LEFT OF CZECHO-SLOVAKIA 


VIENNA, Nov. 3.—Foreign Minis- 
ter Von Ribbentrop of Germany and 
Count Ciano of Italy, it was learned 
Thursday, have assured the Czecho- 
|Slovak Foreign Minister that Ger- 
many and Italy are ready to guaran- 


'tee Czecho-Slovakia’s new frontiers. | 


| secutemambaitii 
|. VIENNA, Nov. 3. — German and 
jItalian mediators Wednesday re- 


mapped the boundaries of Czecho- | 


Slovakia, awarding Hungary the 
major porticn of land and population 
she claimed from the shrinking re- 
public. 


BUDAPEST, Nov. 3. — Informed 
quarters believed Thursday Hungary 
j}would give economic concessions to 
Germany and Italy to show appre- 
ciation for their help in getting a 
large slice of Czecho-Slovakia. 


PRAGUE, Nov. 3.—Czecho-Slova- 
kia Wednesday night semi-officially 
protested terms of the Vienna agree- 
ment awarding a large section of her 
territory to Hungary as “a crime of 
injustice which the great nations 
have committed against us.” The 
Czecho-Slovak national radio said in 
a broadcast shortly after announce- 
ment of the Vienna agreement, “The 
decision of the conference is ex- 


tremely painful, cruel and unjusti- | 
“Even regions where more.) 


fied.” 
than half the population is not Hun- 


garian have been given to Hungary,” | 


it was said. 


LONDON, Nov. 3.—The House of 
Commons Wednesday night endorsed 
Prime Minister Chamberlain’s inten- 
tion of putting into effect the Anglo- 
Italian agreement and British recog- 
nition of the conquest of Ethiopa by 
| taly. 


| TOKIO, Nov. 3.—General revision 


jcast to the nation. 


Japan’s intention to introduce “a 
|new system of peace based on 
|justice.” Prince Konoye acknowl- 


\edged Japan’s gratitude to Germany 
land Italy and said that together they 
|would “build in the world a new 
jorder founded on our common ide- 
ology.” Prince Konoye said Japan 
jintended to break all the “fetters 
placed upon independence and peace” 
in the Far East by the nations of 
| western imperialism in the last cen- 
| CROMER, Norfolk, Nov. 3.— The 
Spanish Insurgent vessel which 
shelled and sank the Spanish Gov- 
ernment freighter Cantabria in the 
North Sea Wednesday a few miles 
outside British territorial waters was 
identified later as the motor vessel 
Nadir. The Nadir shelled the Canta- 
bria for about three hours when the 
Cantabria defied an order to sur- 
lrender. Finally the battered hulk 
caught fire. The crew and passengers 
|were taken off by coastal lifeboats. 
The captain said he knew of no 
casualties, but said the Cantabria 
‘sank just after he left the ship. 


|B. C. POULTRY BREEDERS 


| SUPPLY FOUNDATION STOCK 
AT PROFITABLE PRICES 


So satisfactory has a shipment cf? 
record of performance poultry from 
Canada to British Guiana made last 
year proven to be that the Department 
of Agriculture of that country recently 
placed another order through the Do- 
minion Department of Agriculture. 
This recent order is for eight white 
leghorn pullets and two males and 8 
Rhode Island Red pullets and 2 males 
all of record-of-performance breeding 
stock. The birds are now enroute *o 
British Guiana. The shipment was 
purchased from two British Columbia 
poultry breeders. The satisfactory 
price of $15 each was paid for the pui- 
lets and $25 each for the males, f.o.b. 
breeders’ farms. These birds, like lart 
year's shipment of Barred Plymouth 
Rocks, are to be used for foundation 
breeding stock in British Guiana, 
where poultry raising is becoming an 
increasingly important industry. 


s| -hes: Concert chorus; songs by 
H L. Vaughan, Mrs. Cann and Dr. 
Carlisle. 

During the day and t prac- 
tically every business man Grande 
Prairie visited the studio and offered 
congratulations, with the result that 
the station was a lively place and the 


—— TT 


| 


PROPOSAL FOR BRiTISH TEST 
MOBILIZATION TO BE HELD 
ANNUALLY FOR EMERGENCY 
A plan fer an annual test of mobili- 
zation of Britain's civilian populatio. 
te meet any emergency of the future 
has been placed before the committee 


of imperial def. b Calgary-bo ” 
Brig Gen. A. C. Critchley. “| The famous “Northern Lights 


The scheme is based on precaution- | Bazaar, held last and Satur- 
ary measures evolved by the sports day in the L0.O0.F. turned out 
promoter 18 months ago and applied |to be a huge 
to his vast enterprises during the re- After pro communi’ 
cent crisis. with lots of fun “ringing” his ~~ 4 

At that time a large number of his | and winning many prizes, the blase 
employees were promptly released ai- | goose himself was won by Mrs. E. 

ora. 


“Northern Lights” 
Bazaar Proved 


Big Success 


duties with the Territorials, the bal- 
loon barrage, and the air raids pre-| 
cautions organization, but prearrange.1 | 


hitch by the 


of a shadow plan. 
Genera! Critchley now 


He suggests a tri>l) 


evacuation 
manning 


of 
of all branches of the de- 


congested areas, th: | EDMONTON LIVE STOCK 


EDMONTON, ttle 


fence service, and mobilization on th>|prices holding barely steady. Up to 


basis of a national register with 
minimum of disturbance in industry 


Tell and sell with a Tribune ad. 


* noon off-truck bacons $7.60. 


Australia’s first factory for making 


Axminster carpets is being built. 


Winter Wear 


FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY 


MEN’S FLEECE COMBINATIONS, GOOD WEIGHT... 
BOYS’ FLEECE COMBINATIONS, GOOD WEIGHT 
MEN’S FLEECE SHIRTS OR DRAWERS, PIECE 


OLD STAND-BYS 


MEN’S PENMAN’S 71 COMBINATIONS, PER SUIT 
MEN’S PENMAN’S 71 SHIRTS OR DRAWERS, PIECE 
MEN’S PENMAN’S 95 COMBINATIONS, PER SUIT 


STANFIELD'S GOLD, RED, AND BLUE LABEL COMBINATIONS 
AND SHIRTS AND DRAWERS 


COMBINATIONS AT 
SHIRTS AND DRAWERS AT. 


...- $2.75, $3.50 and $3.95 
. $1.60, $1.95 and $2.25 


ALSO STANFIELD’S A.C. 7700 AND 1800 IN FINER WOOL 
COMBINATIONS 


MEN’S MOCASSIN RUBBERS 
BOYS’ MOCCASIN RUBBERS 
YOUTHS’ 


MOCCASIN RUBBERS ... 


CHILDS’ MOCCASIN RU.GBERS ... 
WOMEN’S MOCCASIN RUBBERS 
MEN’S INDIAN MOCCASINS, PAIR 


MEN'S 2-BUCKLE OVERSHOES 
MEN’S 4-BUCKLE OVERSHOES 


MEN’S JERSEY CLOTH RUBBERS. 


MEN’S SHOE RUBBERS 


SPECIAL 


HONEY -WHIPS— 


WAFER FLAKE OATS—Quick 
cooking, full-flavored. 


BREAK-O-MORN COFFEE — 
Serviceable pail, 
3 Ibs. good coffee 

CLARK’S MINCEMEAT 
1-lb. package 


Creamy, delicious 
LOCAL HONEY 


FANCY ASPARAGUS 
TIPS, tall can 


McINTOSH APPLES— 


WINTER VARIETIES OF APPLES ARE NOW IN 
Special Prices in 5-case lots 


Morrison's 


Cash 
Store 


IT WILL PAY YOU TO BUY HERE 


WE DELIVER 


China and 


Dinnerware 


for 2 weeks only 


Open stock of FINE ENGLISH ROYAL CAMERONIAN DINNER- 


WARE. (This is the popular pattern already in so many homes.) 
——— WY, 
; PSD SALE 


mur 


Dinner Sets 


(All in Selected Patterns) 


hey. $2456. Sale 18.39 
ioe" ia’ an. 13.80 
hee Same” een.. 1-00 
i a... mee 
1 LIMOGES 6-PERSON SET, 
wes 14.95 


(Any number of pieces) 


at 1-3 off 


Regular prices 


Pyrex ©? 


OVEN WARE reduced 25% to 


ee 49 


6-PIECE MIXING BOWL 


SETS. Reg. $2.25 5 
Der 3 3<s cnt tes eae | e 9 


3-PIECE PORRIDGE 
SETS. Reg. 60c, for.. 


Your opportunity for either a Wonderful New Set of China, or filling 
in your needs at unprecedented values is here. SELECT AT ONCE. 


BELL-FLEMING HARDWARE LTD